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Trouvé 123 Résultats pour: Unclean

  • and two pairs of all the animals that are unclean, and of all the birds that fly in the air, seven pairs; no breed must vanish from the earth. (Genesis 7, 3)

  • of all the beasts, clean and unclean, of all the birds, and all the creeping things of earth, (Genesis 7, 8)

  • A man may have touched what has been killed by a wild beast or has fallen dead, or the carcase of a reptile,✻ or some other unclean thing, unaware of his defilement at the time; yet he has incurred guilt by the fault. (Leviticus 5, 2)

  • If it has touched anything unclean, it must be destroyed by fire, not eaten. Only one who is free from defilement may partake of it; (Leviticus 7, 19)

  • and he, too, who eats such flesh after touching any defilement left by man or beast, or anything that makes him unclean. (Leviticus 7, 21)

  • Such beasts as the camel, ruminants with their hoofs single, you must hold unclean, not to be eaten; (Leviticus 11, 4)

  • the rock-rabbit, too, is unclean, a ruminant without cloven hoofs, (Leviticus 11, 5)

  • You are not to eat the flesh of these animals, or touch their carcases; you must regard them as unclean. (Leviticus 11, 8)

  • no one that touches their carcases but is defiled thereby, and must count himself unclean till the evening comes; (Leviticus 11, 24)

  • even if necessity bids him carry such a carcase, he must wash his clothes afterwards, and count himself unclean till set of sun. (Leviticus 11, 25)

  • Any beast that has hoofs, but not cloven hoofs, and does not chew the cud, is to be unclean, and the man who touches it, defiled. (Leviticus 11, 26)

  • Any four-footed beast that walks on its paws is to be unclean, and to touch its carcase is to be defiled till evening comes; (Leviticus 11, 27)


“Se você fala das próprias virtudes para se exibir ou para vã ostentação perde todo o mérito.” São Padre Pio de Pietrelcina