Zach 11:10
|
And I took my rod that was called Beauty, and I cut it asunder to make void my covenant, which I had made with all people.
|
Zach 12:2
|
Behold I will make Jerusalem a lintel of surfeiting to all the people round about: and Juda also shall be in the siege against Jerusalem.
|
Zach 12:3
|
And it shall come to pass in that day, that I will make Jerusalem a burdensome stone to all people: all that shall lift it up shall be rent and torn, and all the kingdoms of the earth shall be gathered together against her.
|
Zach 12:6
|
In that day I will make the governors of Juda like a furnace of fire amongst wood, and as a firebrand amongst hay: and they shall devour all the people round about, to the right hand, and to the left: and Jerusalem shall be inhabited again in her own place in Jerusalem.
|
Mal 2:15
|
Did not one make her, and she is the residue of his spirit? And what doth one seek, but the seed of God? Keep then your spirit, and despise not the wife of thy youth.
|
I Mac 1:12
|
In those days there went out of Israel wicked men, and they persuaded many, saying: Let us go, and make a covenant with the heathens that are round about us: for since we departed from them, many evils have befallen us.
|
I Mac 3:10
|
And Apollonius gathered together the Gentiles, and a numerous and great army from Samaria, to make war against Israel.
|
I Mac 4:51
|
And they set the loaves upon the table, and hung up the veils, and finished all the works that they had begun to make.
|
I Mac 5:19
|
And he commanded them, saying: Take ye the charge of this people: but make no war against the heathens, till we return.
|
I Mac 5:49
|
Then Judas commanded proclamation to be made in the camp, that they should make an assault every man in the place where he was.
|
I Mac 6:58
|
Now therefore let us come to an agreement with these men, and make peace with them and with all their nation.
|
I Mac 6:60
|
And the proposal was acceptable in the sight of the king, and of the princes: and he sent to them to make peace: and they accepted of it.
|
I Mac 8:17
|
So Judas chose Eupolemus the son of John, the son of Jacob, and Jason the son of Eleazar, and he sent them to Rome to make a league of amity and confederacy with them.
|
I Mac 8:20
|
Judas Machabeus, and his brethren, and the people of the Jews have sent us to you, to make alliance and peace with you, and that we may be registered your confederates and friends.
|
I Mac 8:32
|
If therefore they come again to us complaining of thee, we will do them justice, and will make war against thee by sea and land.
|
I Mac 9:70
|
And Jonathan had knowledge of it, and he sent ambassadors to him to make peace with him, and to restore to him the prisoners.
|
I Mac 10:4
|
For he said: Let us first make a peace with him, before he make one with Alexander against us.
|
I Mac 10:4
|
For he said: Let us first make a peace with him, before he make one with Alexander against us.
|
I Mac 10:6
|
And he gave him authority to gather together an army, and to make arms, and that he should be his confederate: and the hostages that were in the castle, he commanded to be delivered to him.
|
I Mac 10:16
|
And he said: Shall we find such another man? now therefore we will make him our friend and our confederate.
|
I Mac 10:20
|
Now therefore we make thee this day high priest of thy nation, and that thou be called the king's friend, (and he sent him a purple robe, and a crown of gold,) and that thou be of one mind with us in our affairs, and keep friendship with us.
|
I Mac 10:54
|
Now therefore let us make friendship one with another: and give me now thy daughter to wife, and I will be thy son in law, and I will give both thee and her gifts worthy of thee.
|
I Mac 10:63
|
And he said to his princes: Go out with him into the midst of the city, and make proclamation, that no man complain against him of any matter, and that no man trouble him for any manner of cause.
|
I Mac 11:5
|
And they told the king that Jonathan had done these things, to make him odious: but the king held his peace.
|
I Mac 11:9
|
And he sent ambassadors to Demetrius, saying: Come, let us make a league between us, and I will give thee my daughter whom Alexander hath, and thou shalt reign in the kingdom of thy father.
|
I Mac 11:28
|
And Jonathan requested of the king that he would make Judea free from tribute, and the three governments, and Samaria, and the confines thereof: and he promised him three hundred talents.
|
I Mac 11:37
|
Now therefore see that thou make a copy of these things, and let it be given to Jonathan, and set upon the holy mountain, in a conspicuous place.
|
I Mac 11:66
|
And they desired him to make peace, and he granted it them: and he cast them out from thence, and took the city, and placed a garrison in it.
|
I Mac 12:39
|
Now when Tryphon had conceived a design to make himself king of Asia, and to take the crown, and to stretch out his hand against king Antiochus:
|
I Mac 12:54
|
They have no prince, nor any to help them: now therefore let us make war upon them, and take away the memory of them from amongst men.
|
I Mac 13:21
|
And they that were in the castle, sent messengers to Tryphon, that he should make haste to come through the desert, and send them victuals.
|
I Mac 13:37
|
The golden crown, and the palm, which you sent, we have received: and we are ready to make a firm peace with you, and to write to the king's chief officers to release you the things that we have released.
|
I Mac 14:12
|
And every man sat under his vine, and under his fig tree: and there was none to make them afraid.
|
I Mac 14:45
|
And whosoever shall do otherwise, or shall make void any of these things shall be punished.
|
I Mac 15:41
|
And he placed there horsemen, and an army: that they might issue forth, and make incursions upon the ways of Judea, as the king had commanded him.
|
I Mac 16:13
|
And his heart was lifted up, and he designed to make himself master of the country, and he purposed treachery against Simon, and his sons, to destroy them.
|
I Mac 16:22
|
But when he heard it he was exceedingly afraid: and he apprehended the men that came to kill him, and he put them to death: for he knew that they sought to make him away.
|
II Mac 2:33
|
Here then we will begin the narration: let this be enough by way of a preface: for it is a foolish thing to make a long prologue, and to be short in the story itself.
|
II Mac 4:11
|
And abolishing those things, which had been decreed of special favour by the kings in behalf of the Jews, by the means of John the father of that Eupolemus, who went ambassador to Rome to make amity and alliance, he disannulled the lawful ordinances of the citizens, and brought in fashions that were perverse.
|
II Mac 5:21
|
So when Antiochus had taken away out of the temple a thousand and eight hundred talents, he went back in all haste to Antioch, thinking through pride, that he might now make the land navigable, and the sea passable on foot: such was the haughtiness of his mind.
|
II Mac 6:21
|
But they that stood by, being moved with wicked pity, for the old friendship they had with the man, taking him aside, desired that flesh might be brought, which it was lawful for him to eat, that he might make as if he had eaten, as the king had commanded of the flesh of the sacrifice:
|
II Mac 7:7
|
So when the first was dead after this manner, they brought the next to make him a mocking stock: and when they had pulled off the skin of his head with the hair, they asked him if he would eat, before he were punished throughout the whole body in every limb.
|
II Mac 7:24
|
Now Antiochus, thinking himself despised, and withal despising the voice of the upbraider, when the youngest was yet alive, did not only exhort him by words, but also assured him with an oath, that he would make him a rich and a happy man, and, if he would turn from the laws of his fathers, would take him for a friend, and furnish him with things necessary.
|
II Mac 9:4
|
And swelling with anger he thought to revenge upon the Jews the injury done by them that had put him to flight. And therefore he commanded his chariot to be driven, without stopping in his journey, the judgment of heaven urging him forward, because he had spoken so proudly, that he would come to Jerusalem, and make it a common burying place of the Jews.
|
II Mac 9:14
|
And the city, to which he was going in haste to lay it even with the ground, and to make it a common buryingplace, he now desireth to make free.
|
II Mac 9:14
|
And the city, to which he was going in haste to lay it even with the ground, and to make it a common buryingplace, he now desireth to make free.
|
II Mac 9:15
|
And the Jews whom he said he would not account worthy to be so much as buried, but would give them up to be devoured by the birds and wild beasts, and would utterly destroy them with their children, he now promiseth to make equal with the Athenians.
|
II Mac 10:15
|
And the Jews that occupied the most commodious hold, received those that were driven out of Jerusalem, and attempted to make war.
|
II Mac 11:2
|
Gathered together fourscore thousand men, and all the horsemen, and came against the Jews, thinking to take the city, and make it a habitation of the Gentiles:
|
II Mac 11:3
|
And to make a gain of the temple, as of the other temples of the Gentiles, and to set the high priesthood to sale every year:
|