Fondare 64 Risultati per: Daily Reading
Happy, Lord, is the man whom thou dost chasten, reading him the lesson of thy law! (Psalms 93, 12)
This letter was still in the reading, when all of a sudden came other envoys from Galilee, their garments rent about them; their message was, (1 Maccabees 5, 14)
So Lysias must betake himself to the king and his generals, with such words as these: Our plight grows daily worse; scant food is left us, and here is a fortress well defended; all the business of the realm claims our care. (1 Maccabees 6, 57)
Nothing but wine to take, nothing but water, thy health forbids; vary thy drinking,✻ and thou shalt find content. So it is with reading; if the book be too nicely polished at every point, it grows wearisome. So here we will have done with it. (2 Maccabees 15, 40)
Nay, I understood too well that God’s dealings with man, here under the sun, are past all accounting for; the more a man labours to read that riddle, the less he finds out, and he least of all, that boasts himself wise in the reading of it. (Ecclesiastes 8, 17)
Or if wide knowledge be thy ambition, she can inform thee of what is past, make conjecture of the future; she is versed in the subtleties of debate, in the reading of all riddles; marvels and portents she can foretell, and what events time or season will bring. (Wisdom of Solomon 8, 8)
whose friendship was such dear delight, whose exercise brought me credit unfailing, her daily comradeship a training in sound judgement, the eloquence she inspired an earnest of renown; win her for myself I must, and went about to attain my purpose. (Wisdom of Solomon 8, 18)
How it burns up the earth at noon-day! How fierce its glow, beyond all endurance! Tend thou the furnace, heat is thy daily portion; (Ecclesiasticus 43, 3)
When all the reading was over, they looked each at other in amazement, and told Baruch all this must be brought to the king’s ears. (Jeremiah 36, 16)
Why, said he, Jeremias gave them out, as if he were reading them aloud, and I sat by with paper and ink to write them down. (Jeremiah 36, 18)
And say, in reading it: Lord, thou dost threaten this place with destruction; man nor beast shall dwell there, it shall lie desolate for ever. (Jeremiah 51, 62)
Then, when thou hast finished reading the scroll, tie a stone to it and sink it in the midst of Euphrates; (Jeremiah 51, 63)
