Gefunden 35 Ergebnisse für: Serving
keeping holiday again and making good cheer, with son and daughter, serving-man and serving-maid, Levite and wanderer, orphan and widow that are thy neighbours. (Deuteronomy 16, 14)
And now you have risen in arms against my father’s house, you have murdered at one blow seventy men that were his sons, and you have made Abimelech, the son of his serving-wench, king of all Sichem; one that is your own kin. (Judges 9, 18)
When David asked who he was, whence he came and whither he was bound, he said, I am a serving-man from Egypt; my master is an Amalecite; three days ago I fell sick, and he left me behind here. (1 Samuel 30, 13)
There was a serving-man left over from Saul’s household, whose name was Siba; David now sent for him. Art thou Siba? he asked. And ready at thy command, the other answered. (2 Samuel 9, 2)
Then the king sent to fetch Siba, that had been serving-man to Saul. All that belonged to Saul, he told him, all the household that once was his, I have given to thy master’s heir. (2 Samuel 9, 9)
he called to the serving-man that waited on him, and bade him thrust the woman out and shut the door on her. (2 Samuel 13, 17)
The men of Israel were marshalled under clan chiefs and commanders and captains; the king had, besides, his commissioners, serving him at the head of their several regiments. Each of them, with twenty-four thousand men under him, went on duty once a year and was relieved at the end of a month. (1 Chronicles 27, 1)
And do thou, my son Solomon, acknowledge ever thy father’s God, serving him faithfully, serving him willingly; no heart but is open to the Lord’s scrutiny, no thought in our minds but he can read it. Search for him, and thou shalt find him; forsake him, and he will for ever reject thee. (1 Chronicles 28, 9)
But he shall be their master; they shall learn the difference between serving me and serving an earthly king. (2 Chronicles 12, 8)
A bottle of wine she bade her serving-maid carry, and a phial of oil, parched corn and dry figs, and bread, and cheese, and so she went out on her journey. (Judith 10, 5)
So she ate and drank with him, but only what her serving-maid had prepared for her. (Judith 12, 19)
And for the serving-maid, Judith let her go free.There, then, Judith lived on in her husband’s dwelling-place, and a hundred and five years had passed before she was laid to rest at his side at Bethulia; (Judith 16, 28)
