Gefunden 1114 Ergebnisse für: life after death

  • Now therefore, return his wife to the man, for he is a prophet. And he will pray for you, and you will live. But if you are not willing to return her, know this: you shall die a death, you and all that is yours.” (Genesis 20, 7)

  • Abraham responded: “I thought to myself, saying: Perhaps there is no fear of God in this place. And they will put me to death because of my wife. (Genesis 20, 11)

  • when he was one hundred years old. Indeed, at this stage of his father’s life, Isaac was born. (Genesis 21, 5)

  • And he led her into the tent of Sarah his mother, and he accepted her as wife. And he loved her so very much, that it tempered the sorrow which befell him at his mother’s death. (Genesis 24, 67)

  • Now the days of Abraham’s life were one hundred and seventy-five years. (Genesis 25, 7)

  • And declining, he died in a good old age, and at an advanced stage of life, and full of days. And he was gathered to his people. (Genesis 25, 8)

  • And the years of the life of Ishmael that passed were one hundred and thirty-seven. And declining, he died and was placed with his people. (Genesis 25, 17)

  • And when he was questioned by the men of that place about his wife, he answered, “She is my sister.” For he was afraid to confess her to be his mate, thinking that perhaps they would put him to death because of her beauty. (Genesis 26, 7)

  • “Whoever will touch the wife of this man will die a death.” (Genesis 26, 11)

  • Again, he dug up other wells, which the servants of his father Abraham had dug, and which, after his death, the Philistines had formerly obstructed. And he called them by the same names that his father had called them before. (Genesis 26, 18)

  • His father said to him: “You see that I am old, and I do not know the day of my death. (Genesis 27, 2)

  • And Rebekah said to Isaac, “I am weary of my life because of the daughters of Heth. If Jacob accepts a wife from the stock of this land, I would not be willing to live.” (Genesis 27, 46)


“O trabalho é tão sagrado como a oração”. São Padre Pio de Pietrelcina