Trouvé 368 Résultats pour: year

  • you shall not reap the aftergrowth of your harvest nor gather the grapes of your uncultivated vines. This shall be a year of rest for the land, (Leviticus 25, 5)

  • Keep holy the fiftieth year and proclaim freedom for all the inhabitants of the land. It shall be a jubilation year for you when each one shall recover his property and go back to his family. (Leviticus 25, 10)

  • In this fiftieth year, your year of Jubilee, you shall neither sow nor reap the aftergrowth, nor gather the grapes from the uncultivated vines. (Leviticus 25, 11)

  • This Jubilee year shall be holy for you, and you shall eat what the field yields of itself without cultivation. (Leviticus 25, 12)

  • In this year of Jubilee each of you shall recover his own property. (Leviticus 25, 13)

  • But if you ask: What will we eat in the seventh year if we do not sow or gather crops?; see that (Leviticus 25, 20)

  • I will send you my blessing in the sixth year that it may produce enough for three years. (Leviticus 25, 21)

  • So in the eighth year the remains of the old crop will provide you with what to sow and to eat until the harvest of the ninth year is ready. (Leviticus 25, 22)

  • But if he does not find the means to repay him, what has been sold shall remain with the buyer until the Jubilee year when it must be given back to its original owner. (Leviticus 25, 28)

  • In the same way, if a man sells a house in a walled city, his right of redemption shall last until the end of a year from the time of its sale; his right of redemption lasts a whole year. (Leviticus 25, 29)

  • If it is not redeemed by the end of a complete year, the house in the walled city shall belong permanently to the one who bought it and to his descendants, and it shall not be released in the Jubilee year. (Leviticus 25, 30)

  • Houses in villages which have no surrounding wall are considered as fields; they have redemption rights and may be released in a Jubilee year. (Leviticus 25, 31)


“Deus ama quem segue o caminho da virtude.” São Padre Pio de Pietrelcina