Encontrados 338 resultados para: wash feet

  • Now Jonathan, the son of Saul, had a son with disabled feet. For he was five years old when the report about Saul and Jonathan arrived from Jezreel. And so, his nurse, taking him up, fled. And while she was hurrying, so that she might flee, he fell and was made lame. And he was called Mephibosheth. (2 Samuel 4, 4)

  • And so, David commanded his servants, and they put them to death. And cutting off their hands and feet, they suspended them up over the pool in Hebron. But the head of Ishbosheth they took and buried in the sepulcher of Abner at Hebron. (2 Samuel 4, 12)

  • And the king said, “Could there be anyone alive from the house of Saul, so that I may show the mercy of God to him?” And Ziba said to the king, “There is left alive a son of Jonathan, with disabled feet.” (2 Samuel 9, 3)

  • But Mephibosheth lived in Jerusalem. For he was fed always from the table of the king. And he was lame in both feet. (2 Samuel 9, 13)

  • And David said to Uriah, “Go into your house, and wash your feet.” And Uriah departed from the house of the king. And a meal from the king followed after him. (2 Samuel 11, 8)

  • But David ascended to the Mount of Olives, climbing and weeping, advancing with bare feet and with his head covered. Moreover, all the people who were with him ascended, weeping with their heads covered. (2 Samuel 15, 30)

  • And Mephibosheth, the son of Saul, descended to meet the king, with unwashed his feet and uncut beard. And he had not washed his garments from the day that the king had departed, until the day of his return in peace. (2 Samuel 19, 24)

  • He bent down the heavens, and it descended; and a fog was beneath his feet. (2 Samuel 22, 10)

  • making my feet like the feet of the stag, and stationing me upon my exalted places, (2 Samuel 22, 34)

  • I will consume them and break them apart, so that they cannot rise up; they will fall under my feet. (2 Samuel 22, 39)

  • Also, you know what Joab, the son of Zeruiah, has done to me, what he did to the two leaders of the army of Israel, to Abner, the son of Ner, and to Amasa, the son of Jether. He killed them, and so he shed the blood of war in peace time, and he set the bloodshed of battle on his belt, which was around his waist, and in his shoes, which were on his feet. (1 Kings 2, 5)

  • “You know the will of my father David, and that he was not able to build a house to the name of the Lord his God, because of the wars that were imminent all around him, until the Lord set them under the steps of his feet. (1 Kings 5, 3)


“Enquanto tiver medo de ser infiel a Deus, você não será’. Deve-se ter medo quando o medo acaba!” São Padre Pio de Pietrelcina