Fundar 121 Resultados para: Escape
The first son she bore him he called Gersam, as if he would say, I have been a stranger, Ger, in an alien land. And when she bore another son, Moses called him Eliezer, Help from God; the God of my father (said he) has helped me to escape from the power of Pharao.✻ (Exodus 2, 22)
And thou shalt tell thy children in those after times all the Lord did for thee when thou madest thy escape from Egypt. (Exodus 13, 8)
And now, when the news of their escape reached the Egyptian court, Pharao and his servants changed their minds about the Israelites; What madness was this, they said, to let our slaves go free! (Exodus 14, 5)
Thus the Lord hardened the heart of Pharao, king of Egypt, and he pursued the Israelites in the hour of their triumphant escape. (Exodus 14, 8)
and the younger Eliezer, Help from God, because, said Moses, the God of my father has helped me to escape from the power of Pharao. (Exodus 18, 4)
Observe the feast of unleavened bread. For seven days, in the first month of spring, thou shalt eat thy bread without leaven, as I bade thee; it was in that spring month thou didst escape from Egypt. (Exodus 34, 18)
In the second year after the escape from Egypt, on the first day of the second month, the Lord spoke to Moses in the tabernacle which attested his covenant, there in the desert of Sinai, giving him this message: (Numbers 1, 1)
In the second year after the escape from Egypt, the Lord gave a message to Moses in the desert of Sinai, in the first month of the year. (Numbers 9, 1)
as a place of refuge, if he could but escape to one of them, for the man that had killed his neighbour unwittingly, without having any feud against him in times past. (Deuteronomy 4, 42)
At this feast, no bread must be eaten that has leaven in it; for seven days thou shalt eat unleavened bread, the food of perilous times, when thou didst escape from Egypt in fear; never as long as thou livest shall the manner of thy departure from Egypt be forgotten. (Deuteronomy 16, 3)
no, the Lord thy God will choose out one place to be the sanctuary of his name, and there thou wilt immolate the paschal victim at set of sun, the time of thy escape from Egypt. (Deuteronomy 16, 6)
There was need to renew this rite, because the men of the older generation, who were of age to bear arms at the time of the escape from Egypt, had died in the course of their desert wanderings. (Joshua 5, 4)
