Talált 237 Eredmények: Stone Cutting
He told you of his covenant, that you were to keep; uttered ten warnings, which he wrote down on two stone tablets; (Deuteronomy 4, 13)
where you must needs worship the gods which men’s hands have made, things of wood and stone that cannot see or hear, cannot taste or smell. (Deuteronomy 4, 28)
All this the Lord proclaimed to the whole multitude of you, there on the mountain, speaking aloud from the heart of the flames, the cloud, and the darkness; this and no more. And he wrote it down on two tablets of stone which he entrusted to me. (Deuteronomy 5, 22)
I went up to the mountain where I was to receive the two stone tablets that recorded the covenant the Lord was making with you and on the mountain, without food and drink, I spent forty days and forty nights. (Deuteronomy 9, 9)
There I received two stone tablets, inscribed by his own divine fingers with all those commandments he gave you on the mountain, from the heart of the flames, when the people met there in full assembly. (Deuteronomy 9, 10)
Forty days and as many nights had passed when he gave me the two stone tablets that recorded the covenant, and said, (Deuteronomy 9, 11)
So I went down the mountain, that was all aflame, with one stone tablet in either hand; (Deuteronomy 9, 15)
Then it was the Lord said to me, Carve two tablets of stone, like those others, and come to meet me at the top of Horeb.✻ Make an ark of wood, (Deuteronomy 10, 1)
A man, for instance, may have gone out with a friend of his, in all innocence, to cut wood; and as he is cutting the axe may fly out of his hand, or the iron come loose from the handle, striking the other and killing him. The author of such mischance will fly for his life to one of the cities aforesaid. (Deuteronomy 19, 5)
Thereupon the citizens shall stone him to death, so that you may be rid of this plague, and every Israelite that hears of it may be afraid to do the like. (Deuteronomy 21, 21)
then the citizens must cast her out of her father’s door and stone her to death; this was a foul deed done in a woman of Israel, to play the wanton in her own father’s house; rid thy company of such a plague as that. (Deuteronomy 22, 21)
Thou shalt not accept mill or mill-stone as a debtor’s pledge; that is to let a man pledge his whole livelihood. (Deuteronomy 24, 6)
