Fondare 641 Risultati per: Israelites
In all my travels with all the Israelites, did I say to any of the judges of Israel, whom I had commanded to shepherd my people Israel: Why do you not build me a cedar-wood temple?" (2 Samuel 7, 7)
When all Hadadezer's vassal kings saw that Israel had got the better of them, they made peace with the Israelites and became their subjects. The Aramaeans were afraid to give any more help to the Ammonites. (2 Samuel 10, 19)
Absalom acted like this with every Israelite who appealed to the king's tribunal, and so Absalom won the Israelites' hearts. (2 Samuel 15, 6)
They took Absalom, flung him into a deep pit in the forest and raised a huge cairn over him. All the Israelites had fled, dispersing to their homes. (2 Samuel 18, 17)
Then the king summoned the Gibeonites and said-now, the Gibeonites were not Israelites, but were a remnant of the Amorites, to whom the Israelites had bound themselves by oath; Saul, however, in his zeal for the Israelites and for Judah, had done his best to exterminate them- hence David said to the Gibeonites, (2 Samuel 21, 2)
In the four hundred and eightieth year after the Israelites came out of Egypt, in the fourth year of Solomon's reign over Israel, in the month of Ziv, which is the second month, he began building the Temple of Yahweh. (1 Kings 6, 1)
And I shall make my home among the Israelites and never forsake Israel my people.' (1 Kings 6, 13)
There was nothing in the ark except the two stone tablets which Moses had placed in it at Horeb, the tablets of the covenant which Yahweh made with the Israelites when they came out of Egypt. (1 Kings 8, 9)
Solomon offered a communion sacrifice of twenty-two thousand oxen and a hundred and twenty thousand sheep to Yahweh; and thus the king and all the Israelites dedicated the Temple of Yahweh. (1 Kings 8, 63)
All those who survived of the Amorite, Hittite, Perizzite, Hivite and Jebusite peoples, who were not Israelites- (1 Kings 9, 20)
their descendants still remaining in the country on whom the Israelites had not been able to enforce the curse of destruction -- these Solomon levied as forced labourers, as is still the case today. (1 Kings 9, 21)
Solomon did not, however, impose forced labour on the Israelites; for they were soldiers, his officials, his administrators, his officers and his chariot and cavalry commanders. (1 Kings 9, 22)
