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  • Thereupon Joiada gave word to the commanders of the army that she must be taken out beyond the temple precincts, and if anyone tried to follow, he should be put to the sword; she must not be slain in the Lord’s house, he told them. (2 Kings 11, 15)

  • and presently he summoned the officers of the guard, with the Cerethite and Phelethite auxiliaries, and the whole populace with them; and together they brought the king back from the Lord’s house, by way of the armourers’ gate, into the palace, and he took his seat on the royal throne. (2 Kings 11, 19)

  • Such money the priests may take for their own, according to their rank; but they must be answerable for repairing the Lord’s house, if they find anything that needs to be made good. (2 Kings 12, 5)

  • This, when its value had been duly reckoned, they paid over to the master-builders, who distributed it to the carpenters and masons that worked in the Lord’s house (2 Kings 12, 11)

  • and carried out the repairs. The stone-cutters, too, must be paid, and wood and stone must be bought ready for fashioning. Thus the repairing of the Lord’s house would not go short for the money which the work needed. (2 Kings 12, 12)

  • The money was not to be used for making pitcher or fork, censer or trumpet, or any other piece of gold or silver ware for the Lord’s house; all the offerings given to the temple (2 Kings 12, 13)

  • It was his own servants that set a conspiracy on foot against him, and slew him in the house at Mello, where the road goes down to Sella; (2 Kings 12, 20)

  • On him the Lord’s hand fell, and he ended his days as a leper, dwelling apart in a house of his own, while his son Joatham had charge of the palace, and heard the complaints of his subjects. (2 Kings 15, 5)

  • but did not abolish the hill-shrines; men still sacrificed and offered incense on the mountain-tops. He it was built the high gate that leads into the Lord’s house. (2 Kings 15, 35)

  • No sooner had king Ezechias heard it, than he tore his garments open, and put on sackcloth, and went into the house of the Lord. (2 Kings 19, 1)

  • These despatches were handed by the messengers to Ezechias, and when he had read them, he went up into the house of the Lord, and held them out open in the Lord’s presence. (2 Kings 19, 14)

  • Sure enough, they were overawed and discomfited, the puny garrisons that held them, frail as meadow grass, or the stalks that grow on the house-top, withering before they can ripen. (2 Kings 19, 26)


“Deus não opera prodígios onde não há fé.” São Padre Pio de Pietrelcina