Trouvé 63 Résultats pour: wear

  • Do not wear a garment woven from wool and linen together. (Deuteronomy 22, 11)

  • Yahweh made you wander in the desert for forty years, but your clothes did not wear out and neither did your sandals from so much journeying. (Deuteronomy 29, 4)

  • I chose them out of all the tribes of Israel to be my priests, to go up to my altar, to burn incense and to wear a priest's robe in my presence, and I gave them all the burnt offerings of Israel. (1 Samuel 2, 28)

  • (Now Tamar was wearing a long robe with sleeves like the virgin daughters of the king used to wear.) So the servant brought her out, bolting the door behind her. (2 Samuel 13, 18)

  • Now you know what Joab, the son of Zeruiah did to me - how he dealt with the two commanders of Israel's armies, Abner the son of Ner, and Amasa the son of Jether. These two he murdered, avenging, in time of peace, blood which had been shed in time of war. He has thus stained with innocent blood the belt I wear and the sandals on my feet. (1 Kings 2, 5)

  • The king of Israel told Jehoshaphat, "I will disguise myself before the battle, but you wear your robes." So the king of Israel disguised himself before the battle. (1 Kings 22, 30)

  • The king of Israel said to Jehoshaphat, "I will disguise myself as we go into battle, but I want you to wear your royal clothes." The king of Aram had given his chariot commanders the following order: "Do not attack anyone of whatever rank, except the king of Israel." When the chariot commanders saw Jehoshaphat, they thought he was the king of Israel. And they wheeled to the attack. But Jehoshaphat gave a shout and Yahweh came to his help, God rescued him and turned the attack away from him. The chariot commanders realized that he was not the king of Israel and called off their pursuit. By chance, however, one of the soldiers shot an arrow which struck the king of Israel between the joints of his armor. The king said to his charioteer, "Turn around and get me out of the battle; I have been hurt." But the battle grew fiercer so that they held the king upright in his chariot facing the Aramaeans until evening, and at sunset he died. (2 Chronicles 18, 29)

  • Forty years you cared for them in the desert and they lacked nothing, neither did their clothes wear out or their feet swell. (Nehemiah 9, 21)

  • She took off the sackcloth and her widow's clothes in which she was dressed. She washed her whole body with water, anointed it with rich perfume, combed her hair and placed a jewelled band around it. She dressed herself in the beautiful garments she had been accustomed to wear when her husband, Manasseh, was living. (Judith 10, 3)

  • You know I am here under constraint, that I loathe the diadem about my brow when I appear in public; as a filthy rag I loathe it and do not wear it in private. (Esther 14, 16)

  • as waters wear away stones and floods wash away the soil, so you destroy the hope of man. (Job 14, 19)

  • but what he stores, the just will wear, and the innocent divide his silver. (Job 27, 17)


“Que Nossa Senhora nos obtenha o amor à cruz, aos sofrimentos e às dores.” São Padre Pio de Pietrelcina