Fondare 1734 Risultati per: ice

  • He has no need, as did the high priests, to offer sacrifice day after day, first for his own sins and then for those of the people; he did that once for all when he offered himself. (Hebrews 7, 27)

  • Now every high priest is appointed to offer gifts and sacrifices; thus the necessity for this one also to have something to offer. (Hebrews 8, 3)

  • With these arrangements for worship, the priests, in performing their service, go into the outer tabernacle repeatedly, (Hebrews 9, 6)

  • This is a symbol of the present time, in which gifts and sacrifices are offered that cannot perfect the worshiper in conscience (Hebrews 9, 9)

  • Therefore, it was necessary for the copies of the heavenly things to be purified by these rites, but the heavenly things themselves by better sacrifices than these. (Hebrews 9, 23)

  • if that were so, he would have had to suffer repeatedly from the foundation of the world. But now once for all he has appeared at the end of the ages to take away sin by his sacrifice. (Hebrews 9, 26)

  • Since the law has only a shadow of the good things to come, and not the very image of them, it can never make perfect those who come to worship by the same sacrifices that they offer continually each year. (Hebrews 10, 1)

  • Otherwise, would not the sacrifices have ceased to be offered, since the worshipers, once cleansed, would no longer have had any consciousness of sins? (Hebrews 10, 2)

  • But in those sacrifices there is only a yearly remembrance of sins, (Hebrews 10, 3)

  • For this reason, when he came into the world, he said: "Sacrifice and offering you did not desire, but a body you prepared for me; (Hebrews 10, 5)

  • First he says, "Sacrifices and offerings, holocausts and sin offerings, you neither desired nor delighted in." These are offered according to the law. (Hebrews 10, 8)

  • Every priest stands daily at his ministry, offering frequently those same sacrifices that can never take away sins. (Hebrews 10, 11)


“O amor nada mais é do que o brilho de Deus nos homens”. São Padre Pio de Pietrelcina