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Trouvé 1136 Résultats pour: Path Of Life

  • Did he not put his life in peril, that day when he slew the Philistine, and the Lord gave the whole army of Israel a great victory? Thou wast there to see it, and rejoice at it; and wilt thou bring on thyself the guilt of blood wrongfully shed, by slaying David, who is innocent of fault? (1 Samuel 19, 5)

  • He tried to pin David to the wall, and David escaped from his presence, while the lance stuck in the wall, baulked of its aim. That night, David fled for his life; (1 Samuel 19, 10)

  • David meanwhile escaped from the Naioth at Ramatha, and came back to have speech with Jonathan. What is it I have done? he asked. For what wrong, what fault of mine does thy father threaten my life? (1 Samuel 20, 1)

  • Nay, said he, never that; thy life is safe enough. My father does nothing, of much moment or of little, without telling me first; why should he have kept this one design dark? It cannot be. (1 Samuel 20, 2)

  • And Jonathan swore a fresh oath to David, so dearly he loved him, dearly as his own life. (1 Samuel 20, 17)

  • So David and his men, about six hundred strong, left Ceila and went back to their wandering life; and Saul, hearing that David had made good his escape from the town, said no more about his purposed attack. (1 Samuel 23, 13)

  • David lay close in the woods of Ziph, well knowing that Saul was bent on taking his life. (1 Samuel 23, 15)

  • And thou hast shewn thyself a true friend this day, sparing my life when the Lord had put it at thy mercy; (1 Samuel 24, 19)

  • Rise up who may to wrong thee and plot against thee, yet shall that soul of thine be in safe keeping with the Lord thy God, stored up in his casket of life; it is the souls of thy enemies he shall cast away, as from the whirling heart of a sling. (1 Samuel 25, 29)

  • Thou wast ever a brave man, Abner, David said, none like thee in Israel; what guard is this thou keepest over thy lord the king? The life of thy lord the king was in danger but now, from a subject of his that found his way into the camp. This was great fault in thee; (1 Samuel 26, 15)

  • were as well worth his chase. I have done thee wrong, Saul answered; return, my son David, return. Never again will I do thee hurt, after this day when thou hast spared my life. My folly, I see it now; my long blindness, I see it now. (1 Samuel 26, 21)

  • I held thy life precious; may the Lord hold mine precious, and deliver me at all time of peril. (1 Samuel 26, 24)


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