Found 36 Results for: ship

  • Then, being forced along a certain island, which is called the Tail, we were barely able to hold on to the ship’s lifeboat. (Acts 27, 16)

  • When this was taken up, they used it to assist in securing the ship. For they were afraid that they might run aground. And having lowered the sails, they were being driven along in this way. (Acts 27, 17)

  • And on the third day, with their own hands, they threw the equipment of the ship overboard. (Acts 27, 19)

  • And now, let me persuade you to be courageous in soul. For there shall be no loss of life among you, but only of the ship. (Acts 27, 22)

  • Yet truly, the sailors were seeking a way to flee from the ship, for they had lowered a lifeboat into the sea, on the pretext that they were attempting to cast anchors from the bow of the ship. (Acts 27, 30)

  • So Paul said to the centurion and to the soldiers, “Unless these men remain in the ship, you will not be able to be saved.” (Acts 27, 31)

  • Truly, we were two hundred and seventy-six souls on the ship. (Acts 27, 37)

  • And having been nourished with food, they lightened the ship, casting the wheat into the sea. (Acts 27, 38)

  • And when day had arrived, they did not recognize the landscape. Yet truly, they caught sight of a certain narrow inlet having a shore, into which they thought it might be possible to force the ship. (Acts 27, 39)

  • And when we happened upon a place open to two seas, they ran the ship aground. And indeed, the bow, being immobilized, remained fixed, but truly the stern was broken by the violence of the sea. (Acts 27, 41)

  • And as for the others, some they carried on boards, and others on those things that belonged to the ship. And so it happened that every soul escaped to the land. (Acts 27, 44)

  • And so, after three months, we sailed in a ship from Alexandria, whose name was ‘the Castors,’ and which had wintered at the island. (Acts 28, 11)


“Deus sempre nos dá o que é melhor para nós.” São Padre Pio de Pietrelcina