Löydetty 336 Tulokset: silver

  • volunteered a gift of five thousand talents and ten thousand darics of gold, ten thousand talents of silver, eighteen thousand talents of bronze and a hundred thousand talents of iron, (1 Chronicles 29, 7)

  • In Jerusalem the king made silver and gold as common as stones, and cedar wood as plentiful as sycamore in the lowlands. (2 Chronicles 1, 15)

  • A chariot was imported from Egypt for six hundred silver shekels and a horse from Cilicia for a hundred and fifty. They also supplied the Hittite and Aramaean kings, who all used them as middlemen. (2 Chronicles 1, 17)

  • So now send me a man skilled at working in gold, silver, bronze, iron, scarlet, crimson and violet materials, and who knows the art of engraving too; he is to work with my skilled men in Judah and Jerusalem, whom my father David has provided. (2 Chronicles 2, 6)

  • the son of a Danite woman by a Tyrian father. He knows the arts of working in gold, silver, bronze, iron, stone, wood, scarlet, violet, fine linen and crimson materials, and is competent to carry out any kind of engraving and to execute any design which may be entrusted to him, in collaboration with your skilled men and those of my lord David, your father. (2 Chronicles 2, 13)

  • Thus all the work done by Solomon for the Temple of Yahweh was completed, and Solomon brought in the gifts which his father David had consecrated; and he had the silver, the gold and all the utensils put into the treasuries of the Temple of God. (2 Chronicles 5, 1)

  • besides what tolls and foreign trade brought in; all the Arab kings and the provincial governors also brought gold and silver to Solomon. (2 Chronicles 9, 14)

  • All King Solomon's drinking vessels were of gold, and all the plate in the House of the Forest of Lebanon was of pure gold; silver was little thought of in Solomon's days, (2 Chronicles 9, 20)

  • since the king's ships went to Tarshish with Huram's employees, and once every three years the merchantmen would come back laden with gold and silver, ivory, apes and baboons. (2 Chronicles 9, 21)

  • and everyone would bring a present with him: objects of silver and of gold, robes, armour, spices, horses and mules; and this went on year after year. (2 Chronicles 9, 24)

  • In Jerusalem the king made silver as common as stones, and cedar wood as plentiful as sycamore in the Lowlands. (2 Chronicles 9, 27)

  • He deposited his father's and his own dedicated gifts of silver, gold and sacred vessels, in the Temple of Yahweh. (2 Chronicles 15, 18)


“Subamos sem nos cansarmos, sob a celeste vista do Salvador. Distanciemo-nos das afeições terrenas. Despojemo-nos do homem velho e vistamo-nos do homem novo. Aspiremos à felicidade que nos está reservada.” São Padre Pio de Pietrelcina