Talált 151 Eredmények: wide path

  • The altar of holocausts was made of acacia wood, on a square, five cubits long and five cubits wide; its height was three cubits. (Exodus 38, 1)

  • At the entrance of the court there was a variegated curtain, woven of violet, purple and scarlet yarn and of fine linen twined, twenty cubits long and five cubits wide, in keeping with the hangings of the court. (Exodus 38, 18)

  • It was square and folded double, a span high and a span wide in its folded form. (Exodus 39, 9)

  • (Og, king of Bashan, was the last remaining survivor of the Rephaim. He had a bed of iron, nine regular cubits long and four wide, which is still preserved in Rabbah of the Ammonites.) (Deuteronomy 3, 11)

  • The temple which King Solomon built for the LORD was sixty cubits long, twenty wide, and twenty-five high. (1 Kings 6, 2)

  • Its lowest story was five cubits wide, the middle one six cubits wide, the third seven cubits wide, because there were offsets along the outside of the temple so that the beams would not be fastened into the walls of the temple. (1 Kings 6, 6)

  • twenty cubits long, twenty wide, and twenty high. (1 Kings 6, 20)

  • The cherubim were placed in the inmost part of the temple, with their wings spread wide, so that one wing of each cherub touched a side wall while the other wing, pointing toward the middle of the room, touched the corresponding wing of the second cherub. (1 Kings 6, 27)

  • He built the hall called the Forest of Lebanon one hundred cubits long, fifty wide, and thirty high; it was supported by four rows of cedar columns, with cedar capitals upon the columns. (1 Kings 7, 2)

  • The porch of the columned hall he made fifty cubits long and thirty wide. The porch extended the width of the columned hall, and there was a canopy in front. (1 Kings 7, 6)

  • Ten stands were also made of bronze, each four cubits long, four wide, and three high. (1 Kings 7, 27)

  • He followed exactly the path his father had trod, serving and worshiping the idols his father had served. (2 Kings 21, 21)


“Lembre-se de que os santos foram sempre criticados pelas pessoas deste mundo, e puseram sob seus pés o mundo e as suas máximas .” São Padre Pio de Pietrelcina