Mosaico decorativo

Encontrados 442 resultados para: Pure Gold

  • for gold and silver the crucible, it is in the furnace of humiliation men shew themselves worthy of his acceptance. (Ecclesiasticus 2, 5)

  • true friendship, a thing beyond compare, its tried loyalty outweighing gold and silver; (Ecclesiasticus 6, 15)

  • Thou hast a friend who is over-long in thy debt; use no cruelty with him; dear to thee as a brother, and shall gold count more? (Ecclesiasticus 7, 20)

  • Thou hast a good wife, a thrifty woman that has thrown in her lot, in the fear of the Lord, with thine; do not leave her; that modesty of hers is a grace gold cannot buy. (Ecclesiasticus 7, 21)

  • with all the power there is in silver and gold to corrupt men, and sway even the hearts of kings; (Ecclesiasticus 8, 3)

  • Vain is that store the miser cherishes; wasted on his distrustful nature, the bright gold! (Ecclesiasticus 14, 3)

  • Precious as an ornament of gold, close-fitting as a bracelet to the right arm, is instruction to a wise man. (Ecclesiasticus 21, 24)

  • Perfumed is all my dwelling-place with storax, and galbanum, and onycha, and stacte, and frankincense uncrushed; the smell of me is like pure balm. (Ecclesiasticus 24, 21)

  • Melt down gold and silver of thine, and get thee a balance that shall weigh thy words, a bridle that shall be the rule of thy mouth;✻ (Ecclesiasticus 28, 29)

  • Lay up store for thyself by obeying the commandments of the most High; more than gold it shall profit thee; (Ecclesiasticus 29, 14)

  • Health of the soul, that lies in duty done faithfully, is more worth having than gold or silver; no treasure so rare that it can match bodily strength. (Ecclesiasticus 30, 15)

  • Many have given themselves up to the lure of gold, and in its beauty found their ruin; (Ecclesiasticus 31, 6)


“O demônio é forte com quem o teme, mas é fraquíssimo com quem o despreza.” São Padre Pio de Pietrelcina