Fondare 616 Risultati per: Good Works
This way and that David went at Saul’s bidding, and his skill never failed him; when Saul put him at the head of his army, he earned the good will of the whole people, and of Saul’s servants above the rest. (1 Samuel 18, 5)
and let him down from a window. So David made good his escape that night; (1 Samuel 19, 12)
he said to David, Let the Lord God of Israel be my witness, if I sound my father to-morrow or next day, and hear good news of David, I will send a messenger to give thee the news; (1 Samuel 20, 12)
So David and his men, about six hundred strong, left Ceila and went back to their wandering life; and Saul, hearing that David had made good his escape from the town, said no more about his purposed attack. (1 Samuel 23, 13)
Go and make your preparations carefully; take good heed to enquire where he has halted on his march and who has seen him there; he knows well enough that a skilful hunter is on his track. (1 Samuel 23, 22)
Thou givest better measure, he said, than I; thou returnest good for evil, and I evil for good. (1 Samuel 24, 18)
Nabal was his name, and he had a wife called Abigail, that was a woman of good sense and of great beauty; but this husband of hers, descended from Caleb, was a churlish fellow, wicked and spiteful in all his dealings. (1 Samuel 25, 3)
And yet these men were good friends to us, leaving us ever unmolested; loss had we none all the time they were with us in the desert; (1 Samuel 25, 15)
He means to make good the threat I uttered in his name, that he would snatch the kingdom from thy hand, and give it to another; it was of David he spoke. (1 Samuel 28, 17)
So Achis sent for David, and said to him, As the Lord is a living God, I know thee for a good man and true; thy place is at my side in battle, and never to this day from the day when first thou camest to me have I had any fault to find with thee. But the chiefs look askance at thee; (1 Samuel 29, 6)
On Joab’s head let the guilt fall, and on all his line; let the line of Joab never want a man that has a running at the reins, or is a leper, or works at the distaff like a woman, or falls in battle, or begs his bread.✻ (2 Samuel 3, 29)
(Taking ears of corn with them, Rechab and Baana made their way in secretly, and smote him in the groin, and made good their escape.✻ ) (2 Samuel 4, 6)
