욥기 4장 Coverdale Bible
- 1 Then answered Eliphas of Theman and sayde vnto him:
- 2 Yf we begynne to comon with the, peradueture thou wilt be myscontent, but who can witholde himself from speakynge?
- 3 Beholde, thou hast bene a teacher of many, and hast comforted the weery hondes.
- 4 Thy wordes haue set vp those that were fallen, thou hast refresshed the weake knees.
- 5 But now that the plage is come vpon the, thou shreckest awaye: now that it hath touched thyself, thou art faint harted.
- 6 Where is now thy feare of God, thy stedfastnesse, thy pacience, and the perfectnesse of thy life?
- 7 Considre (I praye the) who euer peryshed, beynge an innocent? Or, when were the godly destroyed?
- 8 As for those that plowe wickednesse (as I haue sene myself) and sowe myschefe, they reape ye same.
- 9 For whe God bloweth vpon them, they perysh, and are destroyed thorow the blast of his wrath.
- 10 The roaringe of the lyon, the cryenge off the lyonesse, & ye teth off ye lyos whelpes are broke.
- 11 The greate lyon perysheth, because he ca get no pray and the lyons whelpes are scatred abrode.
- 12 There is spoken vnto me a thynge in councell, which hath geuen a terrible sounde in myne eare,
- 13 with a vision in the night, when men are fallen a slepe.
- 14 Soch feare and drede came vpo me, that all my bones shoke.
- 15 And when the wynde passed ouer by me, the hayres of my flesh stode vp.
- 16 Then stode there one before me, whose face I knewe not: an ymage there was, and the wether was still, so that I herde this voyce:
- 17 Maye a man be iustified before God? Maye there eny man be iudged to be clene, by reason of his owne workes?
- 18 Beholde, he hath founde vnfaythfulnesse amonge his owne seruauntes, and proude disobedience amonge his angels.
- 19 How moch more the shal they (that dwell in houses of claye, whose foundacion is but earth) be moth eaten?
- 20 They shalbe destroyed from the mornynge vnto the euenynge: yee they shall perish, or euer they be awarre:
- 21 and be taken awaye so clene, that none of the shall remayne, but be deed, or euer they be awarre off it.