| Holy
Bible - King James Version
of 1611
The Old Testament - The
Wisdom |
1:1
There was a man in
the land of Uz, whose name was
Job; and that man was perfect and
upright, and one that feared God,
and eschewed evil.
1:2
And there were born
unto him seven sons and three
daughters.
1:3
His substance also
was seven thousand sheep, and three
thousand camels, and five hundred
yoke of oxen, and five hundred she
asses, and a very great household;
so that this man was the greatest of
all the men of the east.
1:4
And his sons went
and feasted in their houses,
every one his day; and sent and
called for their three sisters to
eat and to drink with them.
1:5
And it was so, when
the days of their feasting
were gone about, that Job sent and
sanctified them, and rose up early
in the morning, and offered burnt
offerings according to the
number of them all: for Job said, It
may be that my sons have sinned, and
cursed God in their hearts. Thus did
Job continually.
1:6
Now there was a day
when the sons of God came to present
themselves before the LORD, and
Satan came also among them.
1:7
And the LORD said
unto Satan, Whence comest thou? Then
Satan answered the LORD, and said,
From going to and fro in the earth,
and from walking up and down in it.
1:8
And the LORD said
unto Satan, Hast thou considered my
servant Job, that there is
none like him in the earth, a
perfect and an upright man, one that
feareth God, and escheweth evil?
1:9
Then Satan answered
the LORD, and said, Doth Job fear
God for nought?
1:10
Hast not thou made
an hedge about him, and about his
house, and about all that he hath on
every side? thou hast blessed the
work of his hands, and his substance
is increased in the land.
1:11
But put forth thine
hand now, and touch all that he
hath, and he will curse thee to thy
face.
1:12
And the LORD said
unto Satan, Behold, all that he hath
is in thy power; only upon
himself put not forth thine hand. So
Satan went forth from the presence
of the LORD.
1:13
And there was a day
when his sons and his daughters
were eating and drinking wine in
their eldest brother’s house:
1:14
And there came a
messenger unto Job, and said, The
oxen were plowing, and the asses
feeding beside them:
1:15
And the Sabeans fell
upon them, and took them
away; yea, they have slain the
servants with the edge of the sword;
and I only am escaped alone to tell
thee.
1:16
While he was
yet speaking, there came also
another, and said, The fire of God
is fallen from heaven, and hath
burned up the sheep, and the
servants, and consumed them; and I
only am escaped alone to tell thee.
1:17
While he was
yet speaking, there came also
another, and said, The Chaldeans
made out three bands, and fell upon
the camels, and have carried them
away, yea, and slain the servants
with the edge of the sword; and I
only am escaped alone to tell thee.
1:18
While he was
yet speaking, there came also
another, and said, Thy sons and thy
daughters were eating and
drinking wine in their eldest
brother’s house:
1:19
And, behold, there
came a great wind from the
wilderness, and smote the four
corners of the house, and it fell
upon the young men, and they are
dead; and I only am escaped alone to
tell thee.
1:20
Then Job arose, and
rent his mantle, and shaved his
head, and fell down upon the ground,
and worshipped,
1:21
And said, Naked came
I out of my mother’s womb, and naked
shall I return thither: the LORD
gave, and the LORD hath taken away;
blessed be the name of the LORD.
1:22
In all this Job
sinned not, nor charged God
foolishly.
2:1
Again there was a
day when the sons of God came to
present themselves before the LORD,
and Satan came also among them to
present himself before the LORD.
2:2
And the LORD said
unto Satan, From whence comest thou?
And Satan answered the LORD, and
said, From going to and fro in the
earth, and from walking up and down
in it.
2:3
And the LORD said
unto Satan, Hast thou considered my
servant Job, that there is
none like him in the earth, a
perfect and an upright man, one that
feareth God, and escheweth evil? and
still he holdeth fast his integrity,
although thou movedst me against
him, to destroy him without cause.
2:4
And Satan answered
the LORD, and said, Skin for skin,
yea, all that a man hath will he
give for his life.
2:5
But put forth thine
hand now, and touch his bone and his
flesh, and he will curse thee to thy
face.
2:6
And the LORD said
unto Satan, Behold, he is in
thine hand; but save his life.
2:7
So went Satan forth
from the presence of the LORD, and
smote Job with sore boils from the
sole of his foot unto his crown.
2:8
And he took him a
potsherd to scrape himself withal;
and he sat down among the ashes.
2:9
Then said his wife
unto him, Dost thou still retain
thine integrity? curse God, and die.
2:10
But he said unto her,
Thou speakest as one of the foolish
women speaketh. What? shall we
receive good at the hand of God, and
shall we not receive evil? In all
this did not Job sin with his lips.
2:11
Now when Job’s three
friends heard of all this evil that
was come upon him, they came every
one from his own place; Eliphaz the
Temanite, and Bildad the Shuhite,
and Zophar the Naamathite: for they
had made an appointment together to
come to mourn with him and to
comfort him.
2:12
And when they lifted
up their eyes afar off, and knew him
not, they lifted up their voice, and
wept; and they rent every one his
mantle, and sprinkled dust upon
their heads toward heaven.
2:13
So they sat down with
him upon the ground seven days and
seven nights, and none spake a word
unto him: for they saw that his
grief was very great.
3:1
After this opened
Job his mouth, and cursed his day.
3:2
And Job spake, and
said,
3:3
Let the day perish
wherein I was born, and the night
in which it was said, There is a
man child conceived.
3:4
Let that day be
darkness; let not God regard it from
above, neither let the light shine
upon it.
3:5
Let darkness and the
shadow of death stain it; let a
cloud dwell upon it; let the
blackness of the day terrify it.
3:6
As for that
night, let darkness seize upon it;
let it not be joined unto the days
of the year, let it not come into
the number of the months.
3:7
Lo, let that night
be solitary, let no joyful voice
come therein.
3:8
Let them curse it
that curse the day, who are ready to
raise up their mourning.
3:9
Let the stars of the
twilight thereof be dark; let it
look for light, but have
none; neither let it see the dawning
of the day:
3:10
Because it shut not
up the doors of my mother’s
womb, nor hid sorrow from mine eyes.
3:11
Why died I not from
the womb? why did I not
give up the ghost when I came out of
the belly?
3:12
Why did the knees
prevent me? or why the breasts that
I should suck?
3:13
For now should I
have lain still and been quiet, I
should have slept: then had I been
at rest,
3:14
With kings and
counsellors of the earth, which
built desolate places for
themselves;
3:15
Or with princes that
had gold, who filled their houses
with silver:
3:16
Or as an hidden
untimely birth I had not been; as
infants which never saw
light.
3:17 There the
wicked cease from troubling;
and there the weary be at rest.
3:18
There the
prisoners rest together; they hear
not the voice of the oppressor.
3:19
The small and great
are there; and the servant is
free from his master.
3:20
Wherefore is light
given to him that is in misery, and
life unto the bitter in soul;
3:21
Which long for
death, but it cometh not; and
dig for it more than for hid
treasures;
3:22 Which
rejoice exceedingly, and are
glad, when they can find the grave?
3:23
Why is light
given to a man whose way is hid,
and whom God hath hedged in?
3:24
For my sighing
cometh before I eat, and my roarings
are poured out like the waters.
3:25 For the
thing which I greatly feared is come
upon me, and that which I was afraid
of is come unto me.
3:26
I was not in safety,
neither had I rest, neither was I
quiet; yet trouble came.
4:1
Then Eliphaz the
Temanite answered and said,
4:2
If we assay
to commune with thee, wilt thou be
grieved? but who can withhold
himself from speaking?
4:3
Behold, thou hast
instructed many, and thou hast
strengthened the weak hands.
4:4
Thy words have
upholden him that was falling, and
thou hast strengthened the feeble
knees.
4:5
But now it is come
upon thee, and thou faintest; it
toucheth thee, and thou art
troubled.
4:6
Is not
this thy fear, thy confidence,
thy hope, and the uprightness of thy
ways?
4:7
Remember, I pray
thee, who ever perished,
being innocent? or where were the
righteous cut off?
4:8
Even as I have seen,
they that plow iniquity, and sow
wickedness, reap the same.
4:9
By the blast of God
they perish, and by the breath of
his nostrils are they consumed.
4:10 The roaring
of the lion, and the voice of the
fierce lion, and the teeth of the
young lions, are broken.
4:11
The old lion
perisheth for lack of prey, and the
stout lion’s whelps are scattered
abroad.
4:12
Now a thing was
secretly brought to me, and mine ear
received a little thereof.
4:13
In thoughts from the
visions of the night, when deep
sleep falleth on men,
4:14
Fear came upon me,
and trembling, which made all my
bones to shake.
4:15 Then a
spirit passed before my face; the
hair of my flesh stood up:
4:16
It stood still, but
I could not discern the form
thereof: an image was before
mine eyes, there was silence,
and I heard a voice, saying,
4:17 Shall
mortal man be more just than God?
shall a man be more pure than his
maker?
4:18 Behold, he
put no trust in his servants; and
his angels he charged with folly:
4:19 How much
less in them that dwell in
houses of clay, whose foundation
is in the dust, which are
crushed before the moth?
4:20
They are destroyed
from morning to evening: they perish
for ever without any regarding
it.
4:21
Doth not their
excellency which is in them
go away? they die, even without
wisdom.
5:1
Call now, if there
be any that will answer thee; and to
which of the saints wilt thou turn?
5:2
For wrath killeth
the foolish man, and envy slayeth
the silly one.
5:3
I have seen the
foolish taking root: but suddenly I
cursed his habitation.
5:4
His children are far
from safety, and they are crushed in
the gate, neither is there
any to deliver them.
5:5
Whose harvest the
hungry eateth up, and taketh it even
out of the thorns, and the robber
swalloweth up their substance.
5:6
Although affliction
cometh not forth of the dust,
neither doth trouble spring out of
the ground;
5:7
Yet man is born unto
trouble, as the sparks fly upward.
5:8
I would seek unto
God, and unto God would I commit my
cause:
5:9
Which doeth great
things and unsearchable; marvellous
things without number:
5:10 Who giveth
rain upon the earth, and sendeth
waters upon the fields:
5:11 To set up
on high those that be low; that
those which mourn may be exalted to
safety.
5:12
He disappointeth the
devices of the crafty, so that their
hands cannot perform their
enterprise.
5:13
He taketh the wise
in their own craftiness: and the
counsel of the froward is carried
headlong.
5:14
They meet with
darkness in the daytime, and grope
in the noonday as in the night.
5:15
But he saveth the
poor from the sword, from their
mouth, and from the hand of the
mighty.
5:16
So the poor hath
hope, and iniquity stoppeth her
mouth.
5:17
Behold, happy is
the man whom God correcteth:
therefore despise not thou the
chastening of the Almighty:
5:18
For he maketh sore,
and bindeth up: he woundeth, and his
hands make whole.
5:19
He shall deliver
thee in six troubles: yea, in seven
there shall no evil touch thee.
5:20
In famine he shall
redeem thee from death: and in war
from the power of the sword.
5:21 Thou shalt
be hid from the scourge of the
tongue: neither shalt thou be afraid
of destruction when it cometh.
5:22 At
destruction and famine thou shalt
laugh: neither shalt thou be afraid
of the beasts of the earth.
5:23 For thou
shalt be in league with the stones
of the field: and the beasts of the
field shall be at peace with thee.
5:24 And thou
shalt know that thy tabernacle
shall be in peace; and thou
shalt visit thy habitation, and
shalt not sin.
5:25 Thou shalt
know also that thy seed shall be
great, and thine offspring as the
grass of the earth.
5:26
Thou shalt come to
thy grave in a full age, like
as a shock of corn cometh in in his
season.
5:27
Lo this, we have
searched it, so it is; hear
it, and know thou it for thy
good.
6:1
But Job answered and
said,
6:2
O that my grief were
throughly weighed, and my calamity
laid in the balances together!
6:3
For now it would be
heavier than the sand of the sea:
therefore my words are swallowed up.
6:4
For the arrows of
the Almighty are within me,
the poison whereof drinketh up my
spirit: the terrors of God do set
themselves in array against me.
6:5
Doth the wild ass
bray when he hath grass? or loweth
the ox over his fodder?
6:6
Can that which is
unsavoury be eaten without salt? or
is there any taste in the
white of an egg?
6:7
The things that
my soul refused to touch are
as my sorrowful meat.
6:8
Oh that I might have
my request; and that God would grant
me the thing that I long for!
6:9
Even that it would
please God to destroy me; that he
would let loose his hand, and cut me
off!
6:10
Then should I yet
have comfort; yea, I would harden
myself in sorrow: let him not spare;
for I have not concealed the words
of the Holy One.
6:11 What is
my strength, that I should hope? and
what is mine end, that I
should prolong my life?
6:12
Is my
strength the strength of stones? or
is my flesh of brass?
6:13 Is
not my help in me? and is wisdom
driven quite from me?
6:14
To him that is
afflicted pity should be shewed
from his friend; but he forsaketh
the fear of the Almighty.
6:15 My brethren
have dealt deceitfully as a brook,
and as the stream of brooks
they pass away;
6:16
Which are blackish
by reason of the ice, and
wherein the snow is hid:
6:17
What time they wax
warm, they vanish: when it is hot,
they are consumed out of their
place.
6:18
The paths of their
way are turned aside; they go to
nothing, and perish.
6:19 The troops
of Tema looked, the companies of
Sheba waited for them.
6:20 They were
confounded because they had hoped;
they came thither, and were ashamed.
6:21
For now ye are no
thing; ye see my casting
down, and are afraid.
6:22
Did I say, Bring
unto me? or, Give a reward for me of
your substance?
6:23 Or, Deliver
me from the enemy’s hand? or, Redeem
me from the hand of the mighty?
6:24 Teach me,
and I will hold my tongue: and cause
me to understand wherein I have
erred.
6:25 How
forcible are right words! but what
doth your arguing reprove?
6:26 Do ye
imagine to reprove words, and the
speeches of one that is desperate,
which are as wind?
6:27
Yea, ye overwhelm
the fatherless, and ye dig a pit
for your friend.
6:28 Now
therefore be content, look upon me;
for it is evident unto you if
I lie.
6:29
Return, I pray you,
let it not be iniquity; yea, return
again, my righteousness is in
it.
6:30
Is there iniquity in
my tongue? cannot my taste discern
perverse things?
7:1
Is there not
an appointed time to man upon earth?
are not his days also like
the days of an hireling?
7:2
As a servant
earnestly desireth the shadow, and
as an hireling looketh for the
reward of his work:
7:3
So am I made to
possess months of vanity, and
wearisome nights are appointed to
me.
7:4
When I lie down, I
say, When shall I arise, and the
night be gone? and I am full of
tossings to and fro unto the dawning
of the day.
7:5
My flesh is clothed
with worms and clods of dust; my
skin is broken, and become
loathsome.
7:6
My days are swifter
than a weaver’s shuttle, and are
spent without hope.
7:7
O remember that my
life is wind: mine eye shall no more
see good.
7:8
The eye of him that
hath seen me shall see me no
more: thine eyes are upon
me, and I am not.
7:9
As the cloud
is consumed and vanisheth away: so
he that goeth down to the grave
shall come up no more.
7:10
He shall return no
more to his house, neither shall his
place know him any more.
7:11
Therefore I will not
refrain my mouth; I will speak in
the anguish of my spirit; I will
complain in the bitterness of my
soul.
7:12
Am I a sea,
or a whale, that thou settest a
watch over me?
7:13
When I say, My bed
shall comfort me, my couch shall
ease my complaint;
7:14 Then thou
scarest me with dreams, and
terrifiest me through visions:
7:15
So that my soul
chooseth strangling, and
death rather than my life.
7:16
I loathe it;
I would not live alway: let me
alone; for my days are
vanity.
7:17 What is
man, that thou shouldest magnify
him? and that thou shouldest set
thine heart upon him?
7:18
And that thou
shouldest visit him every morning,
and try him every moment?
7:19
How long wilt thou
not depart from me, nor let me alone
till I swallow down my spittle?
7:20
I have sinned; what
shall I do unto thee, O thou
preserver of men? why hast thou set
me as a mark against thee, so that I
am a burden to myself?
7:21
And why dost thou not
pardon my transgression, and take
away mine iniquity? for now shall I
sleep in the dust; and thou shalt
seek me in the morning, but I
shall not be.
8:1
Then answered Bildad
the Shuhite, and said,
8:2
How long wilt thou
speak these things? and
how long shall the words of thy
mouth be like a strong wind?
8:3
Doth God pervert
judgment? or doth the Almighty
pervert justice?
8:4
If thy children have
sinned against him, and he have cast
them away for their transgression;
8:5
If thou wouldest
seek unto God betimes, and make thy
supplication to the Almighty;
8:6
If thou wert
pure and upright; surely now he
would awake for thee, and make the
habitation of thy righteousness
prosperous.
8:7
Though thy beginning
was small, yet thy latter end should
greatly increase.
8:8
For enquire, I pray
thee, of the former age, and prepare
thyself to the search of their
fathers:
8:9
(For we are but
of yesterday, and know nothing,
because our days upon earth are
a shadow:)
8:10
Shall not they teach
thee, and tell thee, and
utter words out of their heart?
8:11
Can the rush grow up
without mire? can the flag grow
without water?
8:12
Whilst it is
yet in his greenness, and not
cut down, it withereth before any
other herb.
8:13
So are the
paths of all that forget God; and
the hypocrite’s hope shall perish:
8:14
Whose hope shall be
cut off, and whose trust shall be
a spider’s web.
8:15
He shall lean upon
his house, but it shall not stand:
he shall hold it fast, but it shall
not endure.
8:16
He is green
before the sun, and his branch
shooteth forth in his garden.
8:17
His roots are
wrapped about the heap, and
seeth the place of stones.
8:18
If he destroy him
from his place, then it shall
deny him, saying, I have not
seen thee.
8:19
Behold, this is
the joy of his way, and out of the
earth shall others grow.
8:20
Behold, God will not
cast away a perfect man,
neither will he help the evil doers:
8:21
Till he fill thy
mouth with laughing, and thy lips
with rejoicing.
8:22
They that hate thee
shall be clothed with shame; and the
dwelling place of the wicked shall
come to nought.
9:1
Then Job answered
and said,
9:2
I know it is
so of a truth: but how should man be
just with God?
9:3
If he will contend
with him, he cannot answer him one
of a thousand.
9:4
He is wise in
heart, and mighty in strength: who
hath hardened himself against
him, and hath prospered?
9:5
Which removeth the
mountains, and they know not: which
overturneth them in his anger.
9:6
Which shaketh the
earth out of her place, and the
pillars thereof tremble.
9:7
Which commandeth the
sun, and it riseth not; and sealeth
up the stars.
9:8
Which alone
spreadeth out the heavens, and
treadeth upon the waves of the sea.
9:9
Which maketh
Arcturus, Orion, and Pleiades, and
the chambers of the south.
9:10
Which doeth great
things past finding out; yea, and
wonders without number.
9:11
Lo, he goeth by me,
and I see him not: he passeth
on also, but I perceive him not.
9:12
Behold, he taketh
away, who can hinder him? who will
say unto him, What doest thou?
9:13
If God will
not withdraw his anger, the proud
helpers do stoop under him.
9:14
How much less shall
I answer him, and choose out
my words to reason with him?
9:15 Whom,
though I were righteous, yet
would I not answer, but I
would make supplication to my judge.
9:16
If I had called, and
he had answered me; yet would
I not believe that he had hearkened
unto my voice.
9:17
For he breaketh me
with a tempest, and multiplieth my
wounds without cause.
9:18
He will not suffer
me to take my breath, but filleth me
with bitterness.
9:19 If I
speak of strength, lo, he is
strong: and if of judgment, who
shall set me a time to plead?
9:20
If I justify myself,
mine own mouth shall condemn me:
if I say, I am perfect, it shall
also prove me perverse.
9:21
Though I
were perfect, yet would I
not know my soul: I would despise my
life.
9:22 This is
one thing, therefore I said
it, He destroyeth the perfect
and the wicked.
9:23 If the
scourge slay suddenly, he will laugh
at the trial of the innocent.
9:24
The earth is given
into the hand of the wicked: he
covereth the faces of the judges
thereof; if not, where, and
who is he?
9:25
Now my days are
swifter than a post: they flee away,
they see no good.
9:26
They are passed away
as the swift ships: as the eagle
that hasteth to the prey.
9:27 If I say, I
will forget my complaint, I will
leave off my heaviness, and comfort
myself:
9:28
I am afraid of all
my sorrows, I know that thou wilt
not hold me innocent.
9:29
If I be
wicked, why then labour I in vain?
9:30
If I wash myself
with snow water, and make my hands
never so clean;
9:31 Yet shalt
thou plunge me in the ditch, and
mine own clothes shall abhor me.
9:32 For he
is not a man, as I am, that
I should answer him, and we
should come together in judgment.
9:33
Neither is there any
daysman betwixt us, that
might lay his hand upon us both.
9:34
Let him take his rod
away from me, and let not his fear
terrify me:
9:35
Then would I
speak, and not fear him; but it
is not so with me.
10:1
My soul is weary of
my life; I will leave my complaint
upon myself; I will speak in the
bitterness of my soul.
10:2
I will say unto God,
Do not condemn me; shew me wherefore
thou contendest with me.
10:3
Is it good
unto thee that thou shouldest
oppress, that thou shouldest despise
the work of thine hands, and shine
upon the counsel of the wicked?
10:4
Hast thou eyes of
flesh? or seest thou as man seeth?
10:5
Are thy days
as the days of man? are thy
years as man’s days,
10:6
That thou enquirest
after mine iniquity, and searchest
after my sin?
10:7
Thou knowest that I
am not wicked; and there is
none that can deliver out of thine
hand.
10:8
Thine hands have
made me and fashioned me together
round about; yet thou dost destroy
me.
10:9
Remember, I beseech
thee, that thou hast made me as the
clay; and wilt thou bring me into
dust again?
10:10
Hast thou not poured
me out as milk, and curdled me like
cheese?
10:11
Thou hast clothed me
with skin and flesh, and hast fenced
me with bones and sinews.
10:12
Thou hast granted me
life and favour, and thy visitation
hath preserved my spirit.
10:13
And these things
hast thou hid in thine heart: I know
that this is with thee.
10:14
If I sin, then thou
markest me, and thou wilt not acquit
me from mine iniquity.
10:15
If I be wicked, woe
unto me; and if I be
righteous, yet will I not
lift up my head. I am full of
confusion; therefore see thou mine
affliction;
10:16
For it increaseth.
Thou huntest me as a fierce lion:
and again thou shewest thyself
marvellous upon me.
10:17
Thou renewest thy
witnesses against me, and increasest
thine indignation upon me; changes
and war are against me.
10:18
Wherefore then hast
thou brought me forth out of the
womb? Oh that I had given up the
ghost, and no eye had seen me!
10:19
I should have been
as though I had not been; I should
have been carried from the womb to
the grave.
10:20
Are not my
days few? cease then, and let
me alone, that I may take comfort a
little,
10:21
Before I go
whence I shall not return,
even to the land of darkness and
the shadow of death;
10:22
A land of darkness,
as darkness itself; and of
the shadow of death, without any
order, and where the light
is as darkness.
11:1
Then answered Zophar
the Naamathite, and said,
11:2
Should not the
multitude of words be answered? and
should a man full of talk be
justified?
11:3
Should thy lies make
men hold their peace? and when thou
mockest, shall no man make thee
ashamed?
11:4
For thou hast said,
My doctrine is pure, and I am
clean in thine eyes.
11:5
But oh that God
would speak, and open his lips
against thee;
11:6
And that he would
shew thee the secrets of wisdom,
that they are double to that
which is! Know therefore that God
exacteth of thee less than
thine iniquity deserveth.
11:7
Canst thou by
searching find out God? canst thou
find out the Almighty unto
perfection?
11:8
It is as high
as heaven; what canst thou do?
deeper than hell; what canst thou
know?
11:9
The measure thereof
is longer than the earth, and
broader than the sea.
11:10
If he cut off, and
shut up, or gather together, then
who can hinder him?
11:11
For he knoweth vain
men: he seeth wickedness also; will
he not then consider it?
11:12
For vain man would
be wise, though man be born like
a wild ass’s colt.
11:13
If thou prepare
thine heart, and stretch out thine
hands toward him;
11:14
If iniquity be
in thine hand, put it far away, and
let not wickedness dwell in thy
tabernacles.
11:15
For then shalt thou
lift up thy face without spot; yea,
thou shalt be stedfast, and shalt
not fear:
11:16
Because thou shalt
forget thy misery, and
remember it as waters that
pass away:
11:17
And thine age
shall be clearer than the noonday;
thou shalt shine forth, thou shalt
be as the morning.
11:18
And thou shalt be
secure, because there is hope; yea,
thou shalt dig about thee, and
thou shalt take thy rest in safety.
11:19
Also thou shalt lie
down, and none shall make thee
afraid; yea, many shall make suit
unto thee.
11:20
But the eyes of the
wicked shall fail, and they shall
not escape, and their hope shall
be as the giving up of the
ghost.
12:1
And Job answered and
said,
12:2
No doubt but ye
are the people, and wisdom shall
die with you.
12:3
But I have
understanding as well as you; I
am not inferior to you: yea, who
knoweth not such things as these?
12:4
I am as one
mocked of his neighbour, who calleth
upon God, and he answereth him: the
just upright man is laughed
to scorn.
12:5
He that is ready to
slip with his feet is as
a lamp despised in the thought of
him that is at ease.
12:6
The tabernacles of
robbers prosper, and they that
provoke God are secure; into whose
hand God bringeth abundantly.
12:7 But ask now
the beasts, and they shall teach
thee; and the fowls of the air, and
they shall tell thee:
12:8 Or speak to
the earth, and it shall teach thee:
and the fishes of the sea shall
declare unto thee.
12:9
Who knoweth not in
all these that the hand of the LORD
hath wrought this?
12:10
In whose hand is
the soul of every living thing, and
the breath of all mankind.
12:11
Doth not the ear try
words? and the mouth taste his meat?
12:12
With the ancient
is wisdom; and in length of days
understanding.
12:13
With him is
wisdom and strength, he hath counsel
and understanding.
12:14
Behold, he breaketh
down, and it cannot be built again:
he shutteth up a man, and there can
be no opening.
12:15
Behold, he
withholdeth the waters, and they dry
up: also he sendeth them out, and
they overturn the earth.
12:16
With him is
strength and wisdom: the deceived
and the deceiver are his.
12:17
He leadeth
counsellors away spoiled, and maketh
the judges fools.
12:18
He looseth the bond
of kings, and girdeth their loins
with a girdle.
12:19
He leadeth princes
away spoiled, and overthroweth the
mighty.
12:20
He removeth away the
speech of the trusty, and taketh
away the understanding of the aged.
12:21
He poureth contempt
upon princes, and weakeneth the
strength of the mighty.
12:22 He
discovereth deep things out of
darkness, and bringeth out to light
the shadow of death.
12:23
He increaseth the
nations, and destroyeth them: he
enlargeth the nations, and
straiteneth them again.
12:24
He taketh away the
heart of the chief of the people of
the earth, and causeth them to
wander in a wilderness where
there is no way.
12:25
They grope in the
dark without light, and he maketh
them to stagger like a
drunken man.
13:1
Lo, mine eye hath
seen all this, mine ear hath
heard and understood it.
13:2
What ye know, the
same do I know also: I am
not inferior unto you.
13:3
Surely I would speak
to the Almighty, and I desire to
reason with God.
13:4 But ye
are forgers of lies, ye are
all physicians of no value.
13:5
Oh that ye would
altogether hold your peace! and it
should be your wisdom.
13:6
Hear now my
reasoning, and hearken to the
pleadings of my lips.
13:7
Will ye speak
wickedly for God? and talk
deceitfully for him?
13:8 Will ye
accept his person? will ye contend
for God?
13:9
Is it good that he
should search you out? or as one man
mocketh another, do ye so
mock him?
13:10
He will surely
reprove you, if ye do secretly
accept persons.
13:11
Shall not his
excellency make you afraid? and his
dread fall upon you?
13:12
Your remembrances
are like unto ashes, your bodies
to bodies of clay.
13:13
Hold your peace, let
me alone, that I may speak, and let
come on me what will.
13:14 Wherefore
do I take my flesh in my teeth, and
put my life in mine hand?
13:15
Though he slay me,
yet will I trust in him: but I will
maintain mine own ways before him.
13:16
He also shall be
my salvation: for an hypocrite shall
not come before him.
13:17
Hear diligently my
speech, and my declaration with your
ears.
13:18
Behold now, I have
ordered my cause; I know that
I shall be justified.
13:19
Who is he
that will plead with me? for
now, if I hold my tongue, I shall
give up the ghost.
13:20
Only do not two
things unto me: then will I not
hide myself from thee.
13:21
Withdraw thine hand
far from me: and let not thy dread
make me afraid.
13:22
Then call thou, and
I will answer: or let me speak, and
answer thou me.
13:23
How many are
mine iniquities and sins? make me to
know my transgression and my sin.
13:24
Wherefore hidest
thou thy face, and holdest me for
thine enemy?
13:25
Wilt thou break a
leaf driven to and fro? and wilt
thou pursue the dry stubble?
13:26
For thou writest
bitter things against me, and makest
me to possess the iniquities of my
youth.
13:27
Thou puttest my feet
also in the stocks, and lookest
narrowly unto all my paths; thou
settest a print upon the heels of my
feet.
13:28
And he, as a rotten
thing, consumeth, as a garment that
is moth eaten.
14:1
Man that is
born of a woman is of few
days, and full of trouble.
14:2
He cometh forth like
a flower, and is cut down: he fleeth
also as a shadow, and continueth
not.
14:3
And dost thou open
thine eyes upon such an one, and
bringest me into judgment with thee?
14:4
Who can bring a
clean thing out of an
unclean? not one.
14:5
Seeing his days
are determined, the number of
his months are with thee,
thou hast appointed his bounds that
he cannot pass;
14:6
Turn from him, that
he may rest, till he shall
accomplish, as an hireling, his day.
14:7
For there is hope of
a tree, if it be cut down, that it
will sprout again, and that the
tender branch thereof will not
cease.
14:8
Though the root
thereof wax old in the earth, and
the stock thereof die in the ground;
14:9
Yet through
the scent of water it will bud, and
bring forth boughs like a plant.
14:10
But man dieth, and
wasteth away: yea, man giveth up the
ghost, and where is he?
14:11
As the waters
fail from the sea, and the flood
decayeth and drieth up:
14:12
So man lieth down,
and riseth not: till the heavens
be no more, they shall not
awake, nor be raised out of their
sleep.
14:13
Oh that thou
wouldest hide me in the grave, that
thou wouldest keep me secret, until
thy wrath be past, that thou
wouldest appoint me a set time, and
remember me!
14:14
If a man die, shall
he live again? all the days
of my appointed time will I wait,
till my change come.
14:15
Thou shalt call, and
I will answer thee: thou wilt have a
desire to the work of thine hands.
14:16
For now thou
numberest my steps: dost thou not
watch over my sin?
14:17
My transgression
is sealed up in a bag, and thou
sewest up mine iniquity.
14:18
And surely the
mountain falling cometh to nought,
and the rock is removed out of his
place.
14:19
The waters wear the
stones: thou washest away the things
which grow out of the dust of
the earth; and thou destroyest the
hope of man.
14:20
Thou prevailest for
ever against him, and he passeth:
thou changest his countenance, and
sendest him away.
14:21
His sons come to
honour, and he knoweth it
not; and they are brought low, but
he perceiveth it not of them.
14:22
But his flesh upon
him shall have pain, and his soul
within him shall mourn.
15:1
Then answered
Eliphaz the Temanite, and said,
15:2
Should a wise man
utter vain knowledge, and fill his
belly with the east wind?
15:3
Should he reason
with unprofitable talk? or with
speeches wherewith he can do no
good?
15:4
Yea, thou castest
off fear, and restrainest prayer
before God.
15:5
For thy mouth
uttereth thine iniquity, and thou
choosest the tongue of the crafty.
15:6
Thine own mouth
condemneth thee, and not I: yea,
thine own lips testify against thee.
15:7
Art thou the
first man that was born? or
wast thou made before the hills?
15:8
Hast thou heard the
secret of God? and dost thou
restrain wisdom to thyself?
15:9
What knowest thou,
that we know not? what
understandest thou, which is
not in us?
15:10
With us are
both the grayheaded and very aged
men, much elder than thy father.
15:11
Are the
consolations of God small with thee?
is there any secret thing with thee?
15:12
Why doth thine heart
carry thee away? and what do thy
eyes wink at,
15:13
That thou turnest
thy spirit against God, and lettest
such words go out of thy
mouth?
15:14
What is man,
that he should be clean? and he
which is born of a woman, that
he should be righteous?
15:15
Behold, he putteth
no trust in his saints; yea, the
heavens are not clean in his sight.
15:16
How much more
abominable and filthy is man,
which drinketh iniquity like water?
15:17
I will shew thee,
hear me; and that which I
have seen I will declare;
15:18
Which wise men have
told from their fathers, and have
not hid it:
15:19
Unto whom alone the
earth was given, and no stranger
passed among them.
15:20
The wicked man
travaileth with pain all his
days, and the number of years is
hidden to the oppressor.
15:21
A dreadful sound
is in his ears: in prosperity
the destroyer shall come upon him.
15:22
He believeth not
that he shall return out of
darkness, and he is waited for of
the sword.
15:23
He wandereth abroad
for bread, saying, Where
is it? he knoweth that the day
of darkness is ready at his hand.
15:24
Trouble and anguish
shall make him afraid; they shall
prevail against him, as a king ready
to the battle.
15:25
For he stretcheth
out his hand against God, and
strengtheneth himself against the
Almighty.
15:26
He runneth upon him,
even on his neck, upon
the thick bosses of his bucklers:
15:27
Because he covereth
his face with his fatness, and
maketh collops of fat on his
flanks.
15:28
And he dwelleth in
desolate cities, and in
houses which no man inhabiteth,
which are ready to become heaps.
15:29
He shall not be
rich, neither shall his substance
continue, neither shall he prolong
the perfection thereof upon the
earth.
15:30
He shall not depart
out of darkness; the flame shall dry
up his branches, and by the breath
of his mouth shall he go away.
15:31
Let not him that is
deceived trust in vanity: for vanity
shall be his recompence.
15:32
It shall be
accomplished before his time, and
his branch shall not be green.
15:33
He shall shake off
his unripe grape as the vine, and
shall cast off his flower as the
olive.
15:34 For the
congregation of hypocrites shall
be desolate, and fire shall
consume the tabernacles of bribery.
15:35
They conceive
mischief, and bring forth vanity,
and their belly prepareth deceit.
16:1
Then Job answered
and said,
16:2
I have heard many
such things: miserable comforters
are ye all.
16:3
Shall vain words
have an end? or what emboldeneth
thee that thou answerest?
16:4
I also could speak
as ye do: if your soul were
in my soul’s stead, I could heap up
words against you, and shake mine
head at you.
16:5
But I would
strengthen you with my mouth, and
the moving of my lips should asswage
your grief.
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