Verse 1
Iob answered, and sayde:
Verse 2
O heare my wordes, and amende yor selues.
Verse 3
Suffre me a litle, that I maye speake also, and the laugh my wordes to scorne, yf ye will.
Verse 4
Is it with a man, that I make this disputacio? Which yf it were so, shulde not my sprete be the in sore trouble?
Verse 5
Marck me well, be aba?shed, and laye youre hade vpon youre mouth.
Verse 6
For whe I pondre & considre this, I am afrayed, and my flesh is smytten with feare.
Verse 7
Wherfore do wicked me lyue in health and prosperite, come to their olde age, & increase in riches?
Verse 8
Their childers children lyue in their sight, & their generacion before their eyes.
Verse 9
Their houses are safe from all feare, for the rodd of God doth not smyte the.
Verse 10
Their bullocke gendreth, and that not out of tyme: their cow calueth, and is not vnfrutefull.
Verse 11
They sende forth their children by flockes, and their sonnes lede the daunce.
Verse 12
They beare with them tabrettes and harpes, and haue instrumentes of musick at their pleasure.
Verse 13
They spende their dayes in welthynesse: but sodenly they go downe to hell.
Verse 14
They saye vnto God: go from vs, we desyre not the knowlege of thy wayes.
Verse 15
What maner of felowe is the Allmightie, that we shulde serue him? What profit shulde we haue, to submitte oure selues vnto him?
Verse 16
Lo, there is vtterly no goodnesse in them, therfore will not I haue to do with the councell of the vngodly.
Verse 17
How oft shal the candle of ye wicked be put out? how oft commeth their destruccion vpon them? O what sorowe shall God geue them for their parte in his wrath?
Verse 18
Yee they shal be euen as chaffe before the wynde, and as dust that the storme carieth awaye.
Verse 19
And though God saue their childre from soch sorowe, yet wil he so rewarde theselues, that they shal knowe it.
Verse 20
Their owne destruccion and misery shal they se with their eyes, and drynke of the fearfull wrath of the Allmighty.
Verse 21
For whath careth he, what become of his housholde after his death? whose monethes passe awaye swifter then an arowe.
Verse 22
In as moch the as God hath ye hyest power of all, who can teach him eny knowlege?
Verse 23
One dyeth now when he is mightie & at his best, rich and in prosperite:
Verse 24
euen when his bowels are at the fattest, and his bones full of mary.
Verse 25
Another dyeth in sorowe and heuynesse, and neuer had good daies.
Verse 26
Now slepe they both a like in the earth, & the wormes couer them.
Verse 27
But I knowe what ye thinke, yee and what ye ymagin agaynst me vnrightuously.
Verse 28
For ye saye: where is the prynces palace? where is the dwellynge of the vngodly:
Verse 29
Axe eny man that goeth by the waye, and (yf ye will not regarde their tokens & dedes) he shal tell you,
Verse 30
that the wicked is kepte vnto the daye of destruccion, and that the vngodly shalbe brought forth in the daye of wrath.
Verse 31
Who darre reproue him for his wayes to his face? who rewardeth him for the vngraciousnesse that he doth?
Verse 32
Yet shal he be brought to his graue, and watch amonge the heape of the deed.
Verse 33
The shal he be fayne to be buried amoge the stones by the broke syde. All men must folowe him, & there are innumerable gone before him.
Verse 34
O how vayne is the comforte yt ye geue me? Are not youre answeres cleane contrary to right and treuth?