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Löydetty 2544 Tulokset: People Of God

  • Jerusalem remembers in the days of her affliction and bitterness all the precious things that were hers from days of old. When her people fell into the hand of the foe, and there was none to help her, the foe gloated over her, mocking at her downfall. (Lamentations 1, 7)

  • All her people groan as they search for bread; they trade their treasures for food to revive their strength. "Look, O LORD, and behold, for I am despised." (Lamentations 1, 11)

  • My eyes are spent with weeping; my soul is in tumult; my heart is poured out in grief because of the destruction of the daughter of my people, because infants and babes faint in the streets of the city. (Lamentations 2, 11)

  • my eyes flow with rivers of tears because of the destruction of the daughter of my people. (Lamentations 3, 48)

  • Even the jackals give the breast and suckle their young, but the daughter of my people has become cruel, like the ostriches in the wilderness. (Lamentations 4, 3)

  • For the chastisement of the daughter of my people has been greater than the punishment of Sodom, which was overthrown in a moment, no hand being laid on it. (Lamentations 4, 6)

  • The hands of compassionate women have boiled their own children; they became their food in the destruction of the daughter of my people. (Lamentations 4, 10)

  • And Baruch read the words of this book in the hearing of Jeconiah the son of Jehoiakim, king of Judah, and in the hearing of all the people who came to hear the book, (Baruch 1, 3)

  • and in the hearing of the mighty men and the princes, and in the hearing of the elders, and in the hearing of all the people, small and great, all who dwelt in Babylon by the river Sud. (Baruch 1, 4)

  • and they sent it to Jerusalem to Jehoiakim the high priest, the son of Hilkiah, son of Shallum, and to the priests, and to all the people who were present with him in Jerusalem. (Baruch 1, 7)

  • after Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon had carried away from Jerusalem Jeconiah and the princes and the prisoners and the mighty men and the people of the land, and brought them to Babylon. (Baruch 1, 9)

  • "`And now, O Lord God of Israel, who didst bring thy people out of the land of Egypt with a mighty hand and with signs and wonders and with great power and outstretched arm, and hast made thee a name, as at this day, (Baruch 2, 11)


“O verdadeiro servo de Deus é aquele que usa a caridade para com seu próximo, que está decidido a fazer a vontade de Deus a todo custo, que vive em profunda humildade e simplicidade”. São Padre Pio de Pietrelcina