Gefunden 39 Ergebnisse für: outer

  • Then he brought me to the outer court, where there were chambers and a pavement. The pavement was laid all around the court, and the chambers, which were on the pavement, were thirty in number. (Ezekiel 40, 17)

  • where, on the outer court, there was a gate facing north, whose length and width he measured. (Ezekiel 40, 20)

  • But its vestibule was toward the outer court; palms were on its pilasters, and it had a stairway of eight steps. (Ezekiel 40, 31)

  • But its vestibule was toward the outer court; palms were on its pilasters here and there, and it had a stairway of eight steps. (Ezekiel 40, 34)

  • Its vestibule was toward the outer court; palms were on its pilasters here and there, and it had a stairway of eight steps. (Ezekiel 40, 37)

  • He measured the building which lay the length of the free area and behind it, and together with its walls on both sides it was one hundred cubits. The inner nave and the outer vestibule (Ezekiel 41, 15)

  • As high as the lintel of the door, even into the interior part of the temple as well as outside, on every wall on every side in both the inner and outer rooms were carved (Ezekiel 41, 17)

  • Then he led me north to the outer court, bringing me to some chambers on the north that lay across the free area and which were also across from the building. (Ezekiel 42, 1)

  • Across the twenty cubits of the inner court and the pavement of the outer court, there were three parallel rows of them on different levels. (Ezekiel 42, 3)

  • On the far side there was a wall running parallel to the chambers along the outer court; its length before these chambers was fifty cubits, (Ezekiel 42, 7)

  • for the length of the chambers belonging to the outer court was fifty cubits, but along its entire length the wall measured one hundred cubits. (Ezekiel 42, 8)

  • Below these chambers there was the way in from the east, so that one could enter from the outer court (Ezekiel 42, 9)


“Reze, reze! Quem muito reza se salva e salva os outros. E qual oração pode ser mais bela e mais aceita a Nossa Senhora do que o Rosario?” São Padre Pio de Pietrelcina