Talált 828 Eredmények: Set
Then all the household goods which are there, you shall gather together in the midst of its streets, and you shall set fire to these, along with the city itself, so that you may consume everything for the Lord your God, and so that it may be an everlasting tomb. It shall no longer be built up. (Deuteronomy 13, 16)
you shall sell them all, so as to turn them into money, and you shall carry it in your hand, and you shall set out for the place which the Lord will choose. (Deuteronomy 14, 25)
When your brother, a Hebrew man or a Hebrew woman, has been sold to you, and has served you for six years, in the seventh year you shall set him free. (Deuteronomy 15, 12)
Remember that you yourself also served in the land of Egypt, and the Lord your God set you free. And therefore, I now command this of you. (Deuteronomy 15, 15)
You should not avert your eyes from them when you set them free, because he has served you for six years, in a manner deserving of the pay of a hired hand. So may the Lord your God bless you in all the works that you do. (Deuteronomy 15, 18)
but only in the place which the Lord your God will choose, so that his name may dwell there. You shall immolate the Passover in the evening, upon the setting of the sun, which is the time when you departed from Egypt. (Deuteronomy 16, 6)
you shall neither make nor set up for yourself a statue. These things the Lord your God hates.” (Deuteronomy 16, 22)
But if afterwards she does not sit well in your mind, you shall set her free. You cannot sell her for money, nor can you oppress her by force. For you have humiliated her. (Deuteronomy 21, 14)
And he shall not return before the evening, after he has washed with water, and then, after the sun sets, he shall return to the camp. (Deuteronomy 23, 11)
Instead, you shall return it to him promptly, before the setting of the sun, so that, sleeping in his own garment, he may bless you, and you may have justice in the presence of the Lord your God. (Deuteronomy 24, 13)
Instead, you shall pay him the price of his labor on the same day, before the setting of the sun. For he is poor, and with it he sustains his life. Otherwise, he may cry out against you to the Lord, and it would be charged to you as a sin. (Deuteronomy 24, 15)
But the Lord would not ignore him. Instead, at that time, his fury and zealousness would be very greatly enflamed against that man, and all the curses which have been written in this volume would settle upon him. And the Lord would abolish his name from under heaven, (Deuteronomy 29, 20)
