Mosaico decorativo

Encontrados 338 resultados para: Silver

  • Such love had I to the house of my God; and now, over and above the preparations I have made for this holy work, I offer gold and silver out of my own purse for the temple’s needs; (1 Chronicles 29, 3)

  • three thousand talents of Ophir gold and seven thousand talents of tried silver. All this, for gilding the temple walls, (1 Chronicles 29, 4)

  • and to put more gold and silver into the craftsmen’s hands.Let every man that has the will to offer make to the Lord here and now, with open hand, his gift. (1 Chronicles 29, 5)

  • and their gift to God’s house was five thousand talents of gold, and ten thousand gold pieces, ten thousand talents of silver, eighteen thousand of bronze, and a hundred thousand of iron; (1 Chronicles 29, 7)

  • Silver he made as common in Jerusalem as stone, and cedars as plentiful as the sycamores that grow in the valleys. (2 Chronicles 1, 15)

  • six hundred silver pieces for a chariot, and for a horse a hundred and fifty; the kingdoms of the Hethites, too, and the kings of Syria sold him horses at the same price.✻ (2 Chronicles 1, 17)

  • A craftsman I would have of thee, that can work skilfully in gold and silver, bronze and iron, tapestry of purple and scarlet and blue; that can help the workmen my father David has left me, here in Jerusalem, carve the figures they would. (2 Chronicles 2, 7)

  • A woman of Dan was his mother, his father a Tyrian. Well he knows how to work in gold and silver, bronze and iron, in marble and in wood, in tapestry of purple and blue, lawn and scarlet thread; to carve what carving thou wilt, and devise all that needs devising, thy craftsmen to aid him, and the craftsmen the king’s grace, thy father, left thee. (2 Chronicles 2, 14)

  • And now Solomon must bring into the temple all the votive offerings his father David had made; silver and gold and lesser ware, all must be stored up in its treasure-chamber. (2 Chronicles 5, 1)

  • not counting what was brought by the envoys of different countries, by his own merchantmen, and by the kings of Arabia, with the governors of their provinces; these, too, brought gold and silver to king Solomon. (2 Chronicles 9, 14)

  • Of gold all the plate was when the king feasted, of pure gold all the ornaments in the house called the Forest of Lebanon; in those days, silver was little thought of. (2 Chronicles 9, 20)

  • Every three years the king’s fleet and Hiram’s would sail to Tharsis, whence they came back laden with gold and silver; with ivory, too, and apes and peacocks for their freight. (2 Chronicles 9, 21)


“Seja modesto no olhar.” São Padre Pio de Pietrelcina