Job 4




lesserot@Job:4:1 @ Then answered Eliphaz the Themanite, and said,

lesserot@Job:4:2 @ If we essay to address a word to thee, wilt thou be wearied? yet who is able to refrain from speaking?

lesserot@Job:4:3 @ Behold, thou hast corrected many, and weak hands thou wast wont to strengthen.

lesserot@Job:4:4 @ Him that stumbled thy words used to uphold, and to sinking knees thou gavest vigor.

lesserot@Job:4:5 @ Yet now, when it cometh to thee, thou art wearied: it toucheth even thee, and thou art terrified.

lesserot@Job:4:6 @ Is not then thy fear of God still thy confidence, thy hope equal to the integrity of thy ways?

lesserot@Job:4:7 @ Remember, I pray thee, who ever perished, being innocent? or where were the righteous destroyed?

lesserot@Job:4:8 @ Even as I have seen, that those who plough wrong–doing, and sow trouble, have to reap the same.

lesserot@Job:4:9 @ Before the breathing of God they perish, and before the breath of his nostrils they come to their end.

lesserot@Job:4:10 @ The roaring of the lion, and the voice of the fierce lion, and the teeth of the young lions, are broken.

lesserot@Job:4:11 @ The old lion perisheth for lack of prey, and the whelps of the lioness have to scatter themselves abroad.

lesserot@Job:4:12 @ But to me a word came by stealth, and my ear took in a scarcely perceptible whisper thereof.

lesserot@Job:4:13 @ In intense thoughts out of visions of the night, when deep sleep falleth on men:

lesserot@Job:4:14 @ Dread came over me, with trembling, and it caused all my bones to shudder.

lesserot@Job:4:15 @ Then flitted a spirit past before my face; the hair of my body stood up:

lesserot@Job:4:16 @ It stood still, but I could not recognize its form; a figure was before my eyes, a slight whisper, then a voice I heard, saying,

lesserot@Job:4:17 @ Can a mortal be more righteous than God? or can a man be more pure than his Maker?

lesserot@Job:4:18 @ Behold, in his servants he putteth no trust, and his angels he chargeth with folly:

lesserot@Job:4:19 @ How much less in those that dwell in houses of clay, whose foundation is in the dust, who are crushed till they come to be eaten by the moth?

lesserot@Job:4:20 @ From morning to evening are they broken to pieces: without laying it they perish for ever.

lesserot@Job:4:21 @ Behold, their excellency which is in them is torn away: they die, and this without wisdom.

lesserot@Job:4:1 @ Then answered Eliphaz the Themanite, and said,

lesserot@Job:4:2 @ If we essay to address a word to thee, wilt thou be wearied? yet who is able to refrain from speaking?

lesserot@Job:4:3 @ Behold, thou hast corrected many, and weak hands thou wast wont to strengthen.

lesserot@Job:4:4 @ Him that stumbled thy words used to uphold, and to sinking knees thou gavest vigor.

lesserot@Job:4:5 @ Yet now, when it cometh to thee, thou art wearied: it toucheth even thee, and thou art terrified.

lesserot@Job:4:6 @ Is not then thy fear of God still thy confidence, thy hope equal to the integrity of thy ways?

lesserot@Job:4:7 @ Remember, I pray thee, who ever perished, being innocent? or where were the righteous destroyed?

lesserot@Job:4:8 @ Even as I have seen, that those who plough wrong–doing, and sow trouble, have to reap the same.

lesserot@Job:4:9 @ Before the breathing of God they perish, and before the breath of his nostrils they come to their end.

lesserot@Job:4:10 @ The roaring of the lion, and the voice of the fierce lion, and the teeth of the young lions, are broken.

lesserot@Job:4:11 @ The old lion perisheth for lack of prey, and the whelps of the lioness have to scatter themselves abroad.

lesserot@Job:4:12 @ But to me a word came by stealth, and my ear took in a scarcely perceptible whisper thereof.

lesserot@Job:4:13 @ In intense thoughts out of visions of the night, when deep sleep falleth on men:

lesserot@Job:4:14 @ Dread came over me, with trembling, and it caused all my bones to shudder.

lesserot@Job:4:15 @ Then flitted a spirit past before my face; the hair of my body stood up:

lesserot@Job:4:16 @ It stood still, but I could not recognize its form; a figure was before my eyes, a slight whisper, then a voice I heard, saying,

lesserot@Job:4:17 @ Can a mortal be more righteous than God? or can a man be more pure than his Maker?

lesserot@Job:4:18 @ Behold, in his servants he putteth no trust, and his angels he chargeth with folly:

lesserot@Job:4:19 @ How much less in those that dwell in houses of clay, whose foundation is in the dust, who are crushed till they come to be eaten by the moth?

lesserot@Job:4:20 @ From morning to evening are they broken to pieces: without laying it they perish for ever.

lesserot@Job:4:21 @ Behold, their excellency which is in them is torn away: they die, and this without wisdom.


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