Fundar 633 Resultados para: Lot
When Mordecai learned what had happened, he tore his garments and put on sackcloth and ashes. Then he walked into the centre of the city, wailing loudly and bitterly, (Esther 4, 1)
until he arrived in front of the Chancellery, which no one clothed in sackcloth was allowed to enter. (Esther 4, 2)
And in every province, no sooner had the royal command and edict arrived, than among the Jews there was great mourning, fasting, weeping and wailing, and many lay on sackcloth and ashes. (Esther 4, 3)
When Queen Esther's maids and officers came and told her, she was overcome with grief. She sent clothes for Mordecai to put on instead of his sackcloth, but he refused them. (Esther 4, 4)
They contained an account of how Mordecai had denounced Bigthan and Teresh, two of the king's eunuchs serving as Guards of the Threshold, who had plotted to assassinate King Ahasuerus. (Esther 6, 2)
Esther again went to speak to the king. She fell at his feet, weeping and imploring his favour, to frustrate the malice that Haman the Agagite had been plotting against the Jews. (Esther 8, 3)
of how Haman son of Hammedatha, the Agagite, the persecutor of all the Jews, had plotted their destruction and had cast the pur, that is, the lot, for their overthrow and ruin; (Esther 9, 24)
I have months of futility assigned to me, nights of suffering to be my lot. (Job 7, 3)
you will only plunge me into the dung, till my clothes themselves recoil from me! (Job 9, 31)
clothe me with skin and flesh, and weave me of bone and sinew? (Job 10, 11)
The life of the wicked is unceasing torment, the years allotted to the tyrant are numbered. (Job 15, 20)
I have sewn sackcloth over my skin, thrown my forehead in the dust. (Job 16, 15)
