Fondare 1036 Risultati per: Great
And once again he swore friendship. But David said, Thy father knows well enough what favour I enjoy with thee, and he thinks to himself, Jonathan must not know; this were great grief to him. But, as the Lord is a living God, and thy soul a living soul, there is but a step between me and death. (1 Samuel 20, 3)
So David and his men marched there and made war on the Philistines, driving off their cattle; he defeated them with great loss, and the town was rid of them. (1 Samuel 23, 5)
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)
So she went home to Nabal, and found him feasting royally. His heart was merry, for he had drunk deep; and she said no word to him, of little import, or great, till morning. (1 Samuel 25, 36)
Thou wast ever a brave man, Abner, David said, none like thee in Israel; what guard is this thou keepest over thy lord the king? The life of thy lord the king was in danger but now, from a subject of his that found his way into the camp. This was great fault in thee; (1 Samuel 26, 15)
and Achis believed what he said, and thought to himself, This man has brought great hurt on his own people of Israel; now he is bound to my service in perpetuity. (1 Samuel 27, 12)
raised a great cry of lamentation, and wept till their tears would flow no more. (1 Samuel 30, 4)
No doubt could David have that the Lord had ratified his sovereignty over Israel, and made him the king of a great people. (2 Samuel 5, 12)
Great grief it was to David, this ruin the Lord had brought on Oza (the place is still called Oza’s Ruin), (2 Samuel 6, 8)
Then word was brought to David how the Lord had blessed Obededom and all that was his for the ark’s sake. So back he went, and brought the ark of God away from Obededom’s house, into David’s Keep, with great rejoicing; seven choirs of dancers he took with him, and a young bull for a victim.✻ (2 Samuel 6, 12)
So David, and Israel with him, brought back the ark that bears record of the Lord’s covenant, with rejoicing and a great din of trumpets. (2 Samuel 6, 15)
David himself, going back to bless his own household, was met by Michol, Saul’s daughter. A day of great renown, she said, for the king of Israel, that exposed his person to man and maid, his own subjects, graceless as a common mountebank! (2 Samuel 6, 20)
