Talált 624 Eredmények: desire for death

  • Indeed, while we are still alive, we are continually being handed over to death, for the sake of Jesus, so that the life of Jesus, too, may be visible in our mortal flesh. (2 Corinthians 4, 11)

  • In us, then, death is at work; in you, life. (2 Corinthians 4, 12)

  • and not simply by his arrival only, but also by means of the encouragement that you had given him, as he told us of your desire to see us, how sorry you were and how concerned for us; so that I was all the more joyful. (2 Corinthians 7, 7)

  • For to be distressed in a way that God approves leads to repentance and then to salvation with no regrets; it is the world's kind of distress that ends in death. (2 Corinthians 7, 10)

  • Are they servants of Christ? I speak in utter folly -- I am too, and more than they are: I have done more work, I have been in prison more, I have been flogged more severely, many times exposed to death. (2 Corinthians 11, 23)

  • all in accordance with my most confident hope and trust that I shall never have to admit defeat, but with complete fearlessness I shall go on, so that now, as always, Christ will be glorified in my body, whether by my life or my death. (Philippians 1, 20)

  • Life to me, of course, is Christ, but then death would be a positive gain. (Philippians 1, 21)

  • I am caught in this dilemma: I want to be gone and to be with Christ, and this is by far the stronger desire- (Philippians 1, 23)

  • he was humbler yet, even to accepting death, death on a cross. (Philippians 2, 8)

  • that I may come to know him and the power of his resurrection, and partake of his sufferings by being moulded to the pattern of his death, (Philippians 3, 10)

  • and through him to reconcile all things to him, everything in heaven and everything on earth, by making peace through his death on the cross. (Colossians 1, 20)

  • now he has reconciled you, by his death and in that mortal body, to bring you before himself holy, faultless and irreproachable- (Colossians 1, 22)


“A sua função é tirar e transportar as pedras, e arrancar os espinhos. Jesus é quem semeia, planta, cultiva e rega. Mas seu trabalho também é obra de Jesus. Sem Ele você nada pode fazer.” São Padre Pio de Pietrelcina