Mosaico decorativo

Trouvé 762 Résultats pour: Gold Altar

  • (Hiram king of Tyre had provided Solomon with all the cedar wood, juniper wood and gold that he wanted), King Solomon gave Hiram twenty towns in the territory of Galilee. (1 Kings 9, 11)

  • Hiram sent the king one hundred and twenty talents of gold. (1 Kings 9, 14)

  • Three times a year Solomon presented burnt offerings and communion sacrifices on the altar which he had built for Yahweh and set his burnt offerings smoking before Yahweh. Thus he completed the Temple. (1 Kings 9, 25)

  • They went to Ophir and took on four hundred and twenty talents of gold, which they brought back to Solomon. (1 Kings 9, 28)

  • She arrived in Jerusalem with a very large retinue, with camels laden with spices and an immense quantity of gold and precious stones. Having reached Solomon, she discussed with him everything that she had in mind, (1 Kings 10, 2)

  • And she presented the king with a hundred and twenty talents of gold and great quantities of spices and precious stones; no such wealth of spices ever came again as those which the queen of Sheba gave to King Solomon. (1 Kings 10, 10)

  • Similarly, Hiram's fleet, which brought the gold from Ophir, also brought back great cargoes of almug timber and precious stones. (1 Kings 10, 11)

  • The weight of gold received annually by Solomon amounted to six hundred and sixty-six talents of gold, (1 Kings 10, 14)

  • King Solomon made two hundred great shields of beaten gold, six hundred shekels of gold going into one shield; (1 Kings 10, 16)

  • also three hundred small shields of beaten gold, three mina of gold going into one shield; and the king put these into the House of the Forest of Lebanon. (1 Kings 10, 17)

  • The king also made a great ivory throne which he overlaid with refined gold. (1 Kings 10, 18)

  • All King Solomon's drinking vessels were of gold, and all the plate in the House of the Forest of Lebanon was of pure gold; silver was little thought of in Solomon's days, (1 Kings 10, 21)


O maldito “eu” o mantém apegado à Terra e o impede de voar para Jesus. São Padre Pio de Pietrelcina