Mosaico decorativo

Encontrados 201 resultados para: Wedding Feast

  • At last they bethought themselves of a feast that is held every year in the Lord’s honour near Silo, at a place north of Bethel, south of Lebona, and east of the road from Bethel to Sichem. (Judges 21, 19)

  • it would be weary waiting for you till they should be grown to manhood; you would be old women too, long before your wedding day. Enough of this, daughters; it is your hard lot that makes it weigh heavy on me, this burden the Lord has given me to bear. (Ruth 1, 13)

  • Never a feast-day would he keep in his own city; he must be at Silo, worshipping the Lord of hosts, and offering him sacrifice; there dwelt the Lord’s priests, Ophni and Phinees, the two sons of Heli. (1 Samuel 1, 3)

  • year after year, when they went up to the Lord’s temple for the feast, it was ever the same. In tears she sat, with no heart for eating, (1 Samuel 1, 7)

  • Every year, his mother made him a little tunic, and brought it with her when she came up with her husband on feast-days for the yearly sacrifice. (1 Samuel 2, 19)

  • look for him as soon as you enter the city, before he goes up to take part in the feast. The people must await his coming before they can eat; he blesses the victim first, and then the guests will sit down. Up with you at once; this is the time when you will find him. (1 Samuel 9, 13)

  • Where the blood of slain men, the flesh of warriors beckoned, never the bow of Jonathan hung back, never the sword of Saul went empty from the feast. (2 Samuel 1, 22)

  • He came to Hebron with twenty men, and there David made a feast for him and his companions. (2 Samuel 3, 20)

  • The rich man was to entertain a friend, who was on his travels; and, to make a feast for this foreign guest, he would take no toll of his own flocks and herds; he robbed the poor man of the one lamb that was his, and welcomed the traveller with that. (2 Samuel 12, 4)

  • But when he went to the king, and said, Thy servant’s sheep are a-shearing, will not my lord king come to the feast, and his servants with him? (2 Samuel 13, 24)

  • Away he goes, to offer up bulls, fatten beasts, and rams without number; all the princes are summoned to the feast, and the chiefs of the army, and the priest Abiathar; and there they sit, eating and drinking, while the cry goes up, Long live king Adonias! (1 Kings 1, 25)

  • With that, Solomon awoke; it was a dream. But when he came back to Jerusalem, he stood before the ark that bears record of the Lord’s covenant, and brought burnt-sacrifice, and made welcome-offerings, with a great feast for all his servants. (1 Kings 3, 15)


“Como é belo esperar!” São Padre Pio de Pietrelcina