Gefunden 595 Ergebnisse für: Egypt
You are to bow down and offer sacrifice only to Yahweh who brought you out of Egypt with great power and outstretched arm. (2 Kings 17, 36)
There you are, relying on that broken reed Egypt, which pricks and pierces the hand of whoever leans on it. That is what Pharaoh king of Egypt is like to all who rely on him. (2 Kings 18, 21)
How could you repel a single one of the least of my master's soldiers? And yet you have relied on Egypt for chariots and horsemen. (2 Kings 18, 24)
Yes, I have dug and drunk of foreign waters; under the soles of my feet I have dried up all Egypt's rivers. (2 Kings 19, 24)
because they have done what is displeasing to me and have provoked my anger from the day their ancestors came out of Egypt until now." ' (2 Kings 21, 15)
In his times, Pharaoh Necho king of Egypt was advancing to meet the king of Assyria at the River Euphrates, and King Josiah went to intercept him; but Necho killed him at Megiddo in the first encounter. (2 Kings 23, 29)
Pharaoh Necho then made Eliakim son of Josiah king in succession to Josiah his father, and changed his name to Jehoiakim. Carrying off Jehoahaz, he took him to Egypt, where he died. (2 Kings 23, 34)
The king of Egypt did not leave his own country again, because the king of Babylon had conquered everywhere belonging to the king of Egypt, from the Torrent of Egypt to the River Euphrates. (2 Kings 24, 7)
Then all the people, high and low, with the military leaders, set off and went to Egypt, being afraid of the Chaldaeans. (2 Kings 25, 26)
So David summoned all Israel from the Shihor of Egypt to the Pass of Hamath, to bring the ark of God from Kiriath-Jearim. (1 Chronicles 13, 5)
Is there another people on earth like your people Israel, whom a god has proceeded to redeem, to make them his people and to make them famous and do for them great and terrible deeds, by driving out nations before your people, whom you redeemed from Egypt?- (1 Chronicles 17, 21)
A chariot was imported from Egypt for six hundred silver shekels and a horse from Cilicia for a hundred and fifty. They also supplied the Hittite and Aramaean kings, who all used them as middlemen. (2 Chronicles 1, 17)
