Löydetty 451 Tulokset: Second Death
Good is the opposite of evil, and life the opposite of death; so the sinner is the opposite of the godly. (Ecclesiasticus 34, 14)
At the time when you end the days of your life, in the hour of death, distribute your inheritance. (Ecclesiasticus 34, 23)
I have often been in danger of death, but have escaped because of these experiences. (Ecclesiasticus 35, 12)
Is it not a grief to the death when a companion and friend turns to enmity? (Ecclesiasticus 38, 2)
four turns of fortune appear, good and evil, life and death; and it is the tongue that continually rules them. (Ecclesiasticus 38, 18)
For sorrow results in death, and sorrow of heart saps one's strength. (Ecclesiasticus 39, 18)
Their perplexities and fear of heart -- their anxious thought is the day of death, (Ecclesiasticus 41, 2)
there is anger and envy and trouble and unrest, and fear of death, and fury and strife. And when one rests upon his bed, his sleep at night confuses his mind. (Ecclesiasticus 41, 5)
are death and bloodshed and strife and sword, calamities, famine and affliction and plague. (Ecclesiasticus 41, 9)
O death, how bitter is the reminder of you to one who lives at peace among his possessions, to a man without distractions, who is prosperous in everything, and who still has the vigor to enjoy his food! (Ecclesiasticus 42, 1)
O death, how welcome is your sentence to one who is in need and is failing in strength, very old and distracted over everything; to one who is contrary, and has lost his patience! (Ecclesiasticus 42, 2)
Do not fear the sentence of death; remember your former days and the end of life; this is the decree from the Lord for all flesh, (Ecclesiasticus 42, 3)
