psa 119:67 NIrV
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  • Deuteronomy 32:15 - When Israel grew fat, they became stubborn. When they were filled with food, they became fat and heavy. They left the God who made them. They turned away from the Rock who saved them.
  • 2 Samuel 11:2 - One evening David got up from his bed. He walked around on the roof of his palace. From the roof he saw a woman taking a bath. She was very beautiful.
  • 2 Samuel 11:3 - David sent a messenger to find out who she was. The messenger returned and said, “She is Bathsheba. She’s the daughter of Eliam. She’s the wife of Uriah. He’s a Hittite.”
  • 2 Samuel 11:4 - Then David sent messengers to get her. She came to him. And he slept with her. Then she went back home. All of that took place after she had already made herself “clean” from her monthly period.
  • 2 Samuel 11:5 - Later, Bathsheba found out she was pregnant. She sent a message to David. She said, “I’m pregnant.”
  • 2 Samuel 11:6 - So David sent a message to Joab. David said, “Send me Uriah, the Hittite.” Joab sent him to David.
  • 2 Samuel 11:7 - Uriah came to David. David asked him how Joab and the soldiers were doing. He also asked him how the war was going.
  • 2 Samuel 11:8 - David said to Uriah, “Go home and enjoy some time with your wife.” So Uriah left the palace. Then the king sent him a gift.
  • 2 Samuel 11:9 - But Uriah didn’t go home. Instead, he slept at the entrance to the palace. He stayed there with all his master’s servants.
  • 2 Samuel 11:10 - David was told, “Uriah didn’t go home.” So he sent for Uriah. David said to him, “You have been away for a long time. Why didn’t you go home?”
  • 2 Samuel 11:11 - Uriah said to David, “The ark and the army of Israel and Judah are out there in tents. My commander Joab and your special troops are camped in the open country. How could I go to my house to eat and drink? How could I go there and sleep with my wife? I could never do a thing like that. And that’s just as sure as you are alive!”
  • 2 Samuel 11:12 - Then David said to him, “Stay here one more day. Tomorrow I’ll send you back to the battle.” So Uriah remained in Jerusalem that day and the next.
  • 2 Samuel 11:13 - David invited Uriah to eat and drink with him. David got him drunk. But Uriah still didn’t go home. In the evening he went out and slept on his mat. He stayed there among his master’s servants.
  • 2 Samuel 11:14 - The next morning David wrote a letter to Joab. He sent it along with Uriah.
  • 2 Samuel 11:15 - In it he wrote, “Put Uriah out in front. That’s where the fighting is the heaviest. Then pull your men back from him. When you do, the Ammonites will strike him down and kill him.”
  • 2 Samuel 11:16 - So Joab attacked the city. He put Uriah at a place where he knew the strongest enemy fighters were.
  • 2 Samuel 11:17 - The troops came out of the city. They fought against Joab. Some of the men in David’s army were killed. Uriah, the Hittite, also died.
  • 2 Samuel 11:18 - Joab sent David a full report of the battle.
  • 2 Samuel 11:19 - He told the messenger, “Tell the king everything that happened in the battle. When you are finished,
  • 2 Samuel 11:20 - his anger might explode. He might ask you, ‘Why did you go so close to the city to fight against it? Didn’t you know that the enemy soldiers would shoot arrows down from the wall?
  • 2 Samuel 11:21 - Don’t you remember how Abimelek, the son of Jerub-Besheth, was killed? A woman dropped a large millstone on him from the wall. That’s how he died in Thebez. So why did you go so close to the wall?’ If the king asks you that, tell him, ‘And your servant Uriah, the Hittite, is also dead.’ ”
  • 2 Samuel 11:22 - The messenger started out for Jerusalem. When he arrived there, he told David everything Joab had sent him to say.
  • 2 Samuel 11:23 - The messenger said to David, “The men in the city were more powerful than we were. They came out to fight against us in the open. But we drove them back to the entrance of the city gate.
  • 2 Samuel 11:24 - Then those who were armed with bows shot arrows at us from the wall. Some of your special troops were killed. Your servant Uriah, the Hittite, is also dead.”
  • 2 Samuel 11:25 - David told the messenger, “Tell Joab, ‘Don’t get upset over what happened. Swords kill one person as well as another. So keep on attacking the city. Destroy it.’ Tell that to Joab. It will cheer him up.”
  • 2 Samuel 11:26 - Uriah’s wife heard that her husband was dead. She mourned over him.
  • 2 Samuel 11:27 - When her time of sadness was over, David had her brought to his house. She became his wife. And she had a son by him. But the Lord wasn’t pleased with what David had done.
  • Psalm 73:5 - They don’t have the problems most people have. They don’t suffer as other people do.
  • Psalm 73:6 - Their pride is like a necklace. They put on meanness as if it were their clothes.
  • Psalm 73:7 - Many sins come out of their hard and stubborn hearts. There is no limit to the evil things they can think up.
  • Psalm 73:8 - They laugh at others and speak words of hatred. They are proud. They warn others about the harm they can do to them.
  • Psalm 73:9 - They brag as if they owned heaven itself. They talk as if they controlled the earth.
  • Psalm 73:10 - So people listen to them. They lap up their words like water.
  • Psalm 73:11 - They say, “How would God know what we’re doing? Does the Most High God know anything?”
  • Psalm 73:12 - Here is what sinful people are like. They don’t have a care in the world. They keep getting richer and richer.
  • Psalm 73:13 - It seems as if I have kept my heart pure for no reason. It didn’t do me any good to wash my hands to show that I wasn’t guilty of doing anything wrong.
  • Psalm 73:14 - Day after day I’ve been in pain. God has punished me in a new way every morning.
  • Psalm 73:15 - What if I had talked like that? Then I wouldn’t have been faithful to God’s children.
  • Psalm 73:16 - I tried to understand it all. But it was more than I could handle.
  • Psalm 73:17 - It troubled me until I entered God’s temple. Then I understood what will finally happen to bad people.
  • Psalm 73:18 - God, I’m sure you will make them slip and fall. You will throw them down and destroy them.
  • Psalm 73:19 - It will happen very suddenly. A terrible death will take them away completely.
  • Psalm 73:20 - A dream goes away when a person wakes up. Lord, it will be like that when you rise up. It will be as if those people were only a dream.
  • Psalm 73:21 - At one time my heart was sad and my spirit was bitter.
  • Psalm 73:22 - I didn’t have any sense. I didn’t know anything. I acted like a wild animal toward you.
  • Psalm 73:23 - But I am always with you. You hold me by my right hand.
  • Psalm 73:24 - You give me wise advice to guide me. And when I die, you will take me away into the glory of heaven.
  • Psalm 73:25 - I don’t have anyone in heaven but you. I don’t want anything on earth besides you.
  • Psalm 73:26 - My body and my heart may grow weak. God, you give strength to my heart. You are everything I will ever need.
  • Psalm 73:27 - Those who don’t want anything to do with you will die. You destroy all those who aren’t faithful to you.
  • Psalm 73:28 - But I am close to you. And that’s good. Lord and King, I have made you my place of safety. I will talk about everything you have done.
  • Revelation 3:10 - You have kept my command to remain strong in the faith no matter what happens. So I will keep you from the time of suffering. That time is going to come to the whole world. It will test those who live on the earth.
  • 2 Samuel 10:19 - All the kings who were under the rule of Hadadezer saw that Israel had won the battle over them. So they made a peace treaty with the Israelites. They were brought under Israel’s rule. After that, the Arameans were afraid to help the Ammonites anymore.
  • Jeremiah 22:21 - When you felt secure, I warned you. But you said, ‘I won’t listen!’ You have acted like that ever since you were young. You have not obeyed me.
  • Hebrews 12:5 - Have you completely forgotten this word of hope? It speaks to you as a father to his children. It says, “My son, think of the Lord’s training as important. Do not lose hope when he corrects you.
  • Hebrews 12:6 - The Lord trains the one he loves. He corrects everyone he accepts as his son.” ( Proverbs 3:11 , 12 )
  • Hebrews 12:7 - Put up with hard times. God uses them to train you. He is treating you as his children. What children are not trained by their parents?
  • Hebrews 12:8 - God trains all his children. But what if he doesn’t train you? Then you are not really his children. You are not God’s true sons and daughters at all.
  • Hebrews 12:9 - Besides, we have all had human fathers who trained us. We respected them for it. How much more should we be trained by the Father of spirits and live!
  • Hebrews 12:10 - Our parents trained us for a little while. They did what they thought was best. But God trains us for our good. He does this so we may share in his holiness.
  • Hebrews 12:11 - No training seems pleasant at the time. In fact, it seems painful. But later on it produces a harvest of godliness and peace. It does this for those who have been trained by it.
  • Psalm 119:176 - Like a lost sheep, I’ve gone down the wrong path. Come and look for me, because I haven’t forgotten to obey your commands.
  • Psalm 119:75 - Lord, I know that your laws are right. You were faithful to your promise when you made me suffer.
  • 2 Chronicles 33:9 - But Manasseh led Judah and the people of Jerusalem astray. They did more evil things than the nations the Lord had destroyed to make room for the Israelites.
  • 2 Chronicles 33:10 - The Lord spoke to Manasseh and his people. But they didn’t pay any attention to him.
  • 2 Chronicles 33:11 - So the Lord brought the army commanders of the king of Assyria against them. They took Manasseh as a prisoner. They put a hook in his nose. They put him in bronze chains. And they took him to Babylon.
  • 2 Chronicles 33:12 - When Manasseh was in trouble, he asked the Lord his God to help him. He made himself very humble in the sight of the God of his people.
  • 2 Chronicles 33:13 - Manasseh prayed to him. When he did, the Lord felt sorry for him. He answered his prayer. The Lord brought Manasseh back to Jerusalem and his kingdom. Then Manasseh knew that the Lord is God.
  • Proverbs 1:32 - “The wrong path that childish people take will kill them. Foolish people will be destroyed by being satisfied with the way they live.
  • Psalm 119:71 - It was good for me to suffer. That’s what helped me to understand your orders.
  • Hosea 2:6 - So I will block her path with bushes that have thorns. I’ll build a wall around her. Then she can’t go to her lovers.
  • Hosea 2:7 - She will still chase after her lovers. But she won’t catch them. She’ll look for them. But she won’t find them. Then she’ll say, ‘I’ll go back to my husband. That’s where I was at first. I was better off then than I am now.’
  • Jeremiah 31:18 - “I have heard the groans of Ephraim’s people. They say, ‘You corrected us like a calf you were training. And we have been trained. Bring us back to you, and we will come back. You are the Lord our God.
  • Jeremiah 31:19 - After we wandered away from you, we turned away from our sins. After we learned our lesson, we beat our chests in sorrow. We were full of shame. What we did when we were young brought dishonor on us.’
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