Fondare 874 Risultati per: Sincere Heart
Justify not thyself before God, for he knoweth the heart: and desire not to appear wise before the king. (Ecclesiasticus 7, 5)
If thou hast a wife according to thy soul, cast her not off: and to her that is hateful, trust not thyself. With thy whole heart, (Ecclesiasticus 7, 28)
For gold and silver hath destroyed many, and hath reached even to the heart of kings, and perverted them. (Ecclesiasticus 8, 3)
Open not thy heart to every man: lest he repay thee with an evil turn, and speak reproachfully to thee. (Ecclesiasticus 8, 22)
And strive not with her over wine, lest thy heart decline towards her, and by thy blood thou fall into destruction. (Ecclesiasticus 9, 13)
Because his heart is departed from him that made him: for pride is the beginning of all sin: be that holdeth it, shall be filled with maledictions, and it shall ruin him in the end. (Ecclesiasticus 10, 15)
For as corrupted bowels send forth stinking breath, and as the partridge is brought into the cage, and as the roe into the snare: so also is the heart of the proud, and as a spy that looketh on the fall of his neighbour. (Ecclesiasticus 11, 32)
An enemy speaketh sweetly with his lips, but in his heart he lieth in wait, to throw thee into a pit. (Ecclesiasticus 12, 15)
The heart of a man changeth his countenance, either for good, or for evil. (Ecclesiasticus 13, 31)
The token of a good heart, and a good countenance thou shalt hardly find, and with labour. (Ecclesiasticus 13, 32)
He that considereth her ways in his heart, and hath understanding in her secrets, who goeth after her as one that traceth, and stayeth in her ways: (Ecclesiasticus 14, 23)
So did he with the six hundred thousand footmen, who were gathered together in the hardness of their heart: and if one had been stiffnecked, it is a wonder if he had escaped unpunished: (Ecclesiasticus 16, 11)
