Fundar 172 Resultados para: disobedience to commandments

  • To be circumcised is of no importance, and to be uncircumcised is of no importance; what is important is the keeping of God's commandments. (1 Corinthians 7, 19)

  • once you have given your complete obedience, we are prepared to punish any disobedience. (2 Corinthians 10, 6)

  • that is, the Law of commandments with its decrees. His purpose in this was, by restoring peace, to create a single New Man out of the two of them, (Ephesians 2, 15)

  • and all about things which perish even while they are being used -- according to merely human commandments and doctrines! (Colossians 2, 22)

  • If a message that was spoken through angels proved to be so reliable that every infringement and disobedience brought its own proper punishment, (Hebrews 2, 2)

  • and why, after Moses had promulgated all the commandments of the Law to the people, he took the calves' blood, the goats' blood and some water, and with these he sprinkled the book itself and all the people, using scarlet wool and hyssop; (Hebrews 9, 19)

  • In this way we know that we have come to know him, if we keep his commandments. (1 John 2, 3)

  • Whoever says, 'I know him' without keeping his commandments, is a liar, and truth has no place in him. (1 John 2, 4)

  • and whatever we ask we shall receive from him, because we keep his commandments and do what is acceptable to him. (1 John 3, 22)

  • Whoever keeps his commandments remains in God, and God in him. And this is the proof that he remains in us: the Spirit that he has given us. (1 John 3, 24)

  • In this way we know that we love God's children, when we love God and keep his commandments. (1 John 5, 2)

  • This is what the love of God is: keeping his commandments. Nor are his commandments burdensome, (1 John 5, 3)


“Amar significa dar aos outros – especialmente a quem precisa e a quem sofre – o que de melhor temos em nós mesmos e de nós mesmos; e de dá-lo sorridentes e felizes, renunciando ao nosso egoísmo, à nossa alegria, ao nosso prazer e ao nosso orgulho”. São Padre Pio de Pietrelcina