Löydetty 806 Tulokset: living water

  • They also took Lot (the nephew of Abram) and his possessions and made off; he had been living at Sodom. (Genesis 14, 12)

  • A survivor came to tell Abram, and Aner the Hebrew, who was living at the Oak of the Amorite Mamre, the brother of Eshcol; these were allies of Abram. (Genesis 14, 13)

  • A wild donkey of a man he will be, his hand against every man, and every man's hand against him, living his life in defiance of all his kinsmen. (Genesis 16, 12)

  • Let me have a little water brought, and you can wash your feet and have a rest under the tree. (Genesis 18, 4)

  • He overthrew those cities and the whole plain, with all the people living in the cities and everything that grew there. (Genesis 19, 25)

  • Thus it was that, when God destroyed the cities of the plain, he did not forget Abraham and he rescued Lot from the midst of the overthrow, when he overthrew the cities where Lot was living. (Genesis 19, 29)

  • Early next morning, Abraham took some bread and a skin of water and, giving them to Hagar, put the child on her shoulder and sent her away. She wandered off into the desert of Beersheba. (Genesis 21, 14)

  • When the skin of water was finished she abandoned the child under a bush. (Genesis 21, 15)

  • Then God opened Hagar's eyes and she saw a well, so she went and filled the skin with water and gave the boy a drink. (Genesis 21, 19)

  • In the evening, at the time when women come out to draw water, he made the camels kneel outside the town near the well. (Genesis 24, 11)

  • While I stand by the spring as the young women from the town come out to draw water, (Genesis 24, 13)

  • I shall say to one of the girls, "Please lower your pitcher and let me drink." And if she answers, "Drink, and I shall water your camels too," let her be the one you have decreed for your servant Isaac; by this I shall know you have shown faithful love to my master' (Genesis 24, 14)


“Diante de Deus ajoelhe-se sempre.” São Padre Pio de Pietrelcina