Löydetty 71 Tulokset: Roman soldiers

  • He immediately called out soldiers and centurions and charged down on the crowd, who stopped beating Paul when they saw the tribune and the soldiers. (Acts 21, 32)

  • When Paul reached the steps, the crowd became so violent that he had to be carried by the soldiers; (Acts 21, 35)

  • But when they had strapped him down Paul said to the centurion on duty, 'Is it legal for you to flog a man who is a Roman citizen and has not been brought to trial?' (Acts 22, 25)

  • When he heard this the centurion went and told the tribune; 'Do you realise what you are doing?' he said. 'This man is a Roman citizen.' (Acts 22, 26)

  • So the tribune came and asked him, 'Tell me, are you a Roman citizen?' Paul answered 'Yes'. (Acts 22, 27)

  • Then those who were about to examine him hurriedly withdrew, and the tribune himself was alarmed when he realised that he had put a Roman citizen in chains. (Acts 22, 29)

  • Then he summoned two of the centurions and said, 'Get two hundred soldiers ready to leave for Caesarea by the third hour of the night with seventy cavalry and two hundred auxiliaries; (Acts 23, 23)

  • This man had been seized by the Jews and would have been murdered by them; but I came on the scene with my troops and got him away, having discovered that he was a Roman citizen. (Acts 23, 27)

  • The soldiers carried out their orders; they took Paul and escorted him by night to Antipatris. (Acts 23, 31)

  • So the soldiers cut the boat's ropes and let it drop away. (Acts 27, 32)

  • The soldiers planned to kill the prisoners for fear that any should swim off and escape. (Acts 27, 42)


“O temor e a confiança devem dar as mãos e proceder como irmãos. Se nos damos conta de que temos muito temor devemos recorrer à confiança. Se confiamos excessivamente devemos ter um pouco de temor”. São Padre Pio de Pietrelcina