Löydetty 838 Tulokset: Divine Message
Things of silver and gold and wood, that have women for their ministers, shall the divine name be theirs? (Baruch 6, 29)
and shall the handicraft of mortal craftsmen be divine? (Baruch 6, 46)
Man’s handiwork, with nothing in them of the divine, who can doubt it? (Baruch 6, 51)
Against the king’s power, against the enemy’s attack, they can make no head; who shall reckon them or name them divine? (Baruch 6, 55)
To the priest Ezechiel, son of Buzi, the divine word came; there in the Chaldaean land, by the river Chobar, the power of the Lord could reach him. (Ezekiel 1, 3)
Each of them marched straight forward, following the movement of a divine impulse, never swerving as he marched. (Ezekiel 1, 12)
And at his words, a divine force mastered me, raising me to my feet, so that I could listen to him. (Ezekiel 2, 2)
To brazen-faced folk and hard-hearted thy errand is, and still from the Lord God a message thou must deliver, (Ezekiel 2, 4)
Son of man, he told me, eat thou must what eat thou canst; here is this scroll for thy eating. After that, go and give my message to the sons of Israel. (Ezekiel 3, 1)
Now, son of man, said he, to the men of Israel betake thee, and give them my message. (Ezekiel 3, 4)
then to captive Israel betake thee, and give them thy message in the name of the Lord God, hear they or deny thee hearing. (Ezekiel 3, 11)
Son of man, he told me, I am posting thee here as a sentry, to give the sons of Israel warning; no message I send thee but thou must pass it on in my name. (Ezekiel 3, 17)
