Job 22:11
Shouldest thou then see no darknesse? shoulde not the water fludde run ouer thee?
Shouldest thou then see no darknesse? shoulde not the water fludde run ouer thee?
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10Therefore art thou compassed about with snares, & sodenly vexed with feare.
34Moreouer, canst thou lift vp thy voyce to the cloudes, that they may powre downe a great rayne vpon thee?
12Is not God on high in the heauen? beholde the heyght of the starres how hie they are.
13Wilt thou therfore say, Tushe, howe should God know? can he iudge through the darke cloude?
14Tushe, the cloudes couer him that he may not see, and he walketh on the top of heauen.
22Yea a lande as darke as darknesse it selfe, and into the shadowe of death where is none order, but the light is there as darknesse.
12He made darknes a tabernacle rounde about him: with waters gathered together in thicke cloudes.
11For his secrete place he dyd put darkenesse: and for his pauilion rounde about hym, he dyd put darknesse of waters in cloudes of the ayre.
11And yf I say peraduenture the darknesse shall couer me: and the night shalbe day for me,
12Truely the darknesse shall not darken any thing from thee, and the night shalbe as lyghtsome as the day: darknesse and lyght to thee are both a lyke.
4The same day be turned to darknesse, and not regarded of God from aboue, neither let the light shyne vpon it:
5But let it be stayned with darknesse and the shadowe of death, let the dimme cloude fall vpon it, whiche may make it terrible as a most bitter day.
6Let the darke storme ouercome that night, and let it not be ioyned vnto the dayes of the yere, nor counted in the number of the monethes.
30Behold, he doth stretch his light vpon it, and couereth the bottome of the sea.
19Then shewe me the way where light dwelleth, & where is the place of darkenesse?
20Terrour taketh holde vpon hym as a water fludde, and the tempest stealeth him away in the night season.
16Camest thou euer into the grounde of the sea, or walkedst in the lowe corners of the deepe?
17Haue the gates of death ben opened vnto thee? or hast thou seene the doores of the shadowe of death?
8It is hier then heauen, what art thou able to do? deeper then the hel, how wilt thou then knowe it?
9The measure of it is longer then the earth, and broder then the sea.
22Loke what lyeth hid in darkenesse he declareth it openly, and the very shadowe of death bringeth he to light.
11He bindeth the fluddes that they do not ouerflow: and the thing that is hid bringeth he to light.
17Because I am not cut of before the darkenesse, neither hath he couered the cloude fro my face.
6Thou coueredst it with the deepe, lyke as with a garment: the waters stande vpon the hilles.
11Therefore shall trouble come vpon thee, and thou shalt not knowe from whence it shall arise: Mischiefe shall fal vpon thee, which thou shalt not be able to put of, a sodayne vtter destruction shall come vpon thee or euer thou be ware.
32With the cloudes he hydeth the light, and at his commaundement it breaketh out:
16Then shouldest thou forget thy miserie, and thinke no more vpon it, then vpon the waters that runne by.
17Then should thy lyfe be as cleare as the noone day, thou shouldest shine forth, and be as the morning.
22There is no darkenesse nor shadowe of death that can hide the wicked doers from him.
8But with an ouerrunning flood he wil destroy her place, and will pursue his enemies with darkenesse.
22And beholde there is trouble and darknesse, dymnesse is rounde about him, & he shalbe driuen into darknesse.
16Honour the Lorde your God or he take his light from you, and or euer your feete stumble in darcknesse at the hyll: lest when you loke for the lyght, he turne it into the shadowe and darcknesse of death.
10He hath compassed the waters with certayne boundes, vntill the day and night come to an ende.
8He hath hedged vp my way that I can not passe, and he hath set darkenesse in my pathes.
19Teache vs what we shall saye vnto him: for we are vnmeete to frame our talke because of darkenesse.
5The waters compassed me euen vnto the soule, the deapth closed me on euery side, and the weedes were wrapt about my head.
17Beholde O thou man, the Lorde shal cary thee away into captiuitie, and shall surely couer thee with confusion.
14And makest men as the fishe of the sea, and as the creeping thinges that haue no ruler ouer them.
7When thou art put out, I wyll couer the heauen, and make his starres dim: I wyll spreade a cloude ouer the sunne, and the moone shall not geue her light.
8All the lightes of heauen wyll I make darke for thee: and bring darkenesse vpon thy lande, saith the Lorde God.
17These are welles without water, cloudes that are caryed with a tempest, to whom the mist of darknesse is reserued for euer.
16The waters sawe thee O God, the waters sawe thee, they feared: yea the depthes of them moued out of their place.
3The darkenesse shall once come to an ende: he can seke out the grounde of all thinges, the stones, the darke, and the shadowe of death.
4He causeth the fluddes to breake out against the inhabitant, and the waters forgotten of the foote, beyng hygher then man, are gone away.
30That the waters are hidde as with a stone, and lye congealed aboue the deepe.
7One deepe calleth another at the noyse of thy water pypes: all thy waues and stormes are gone ouer me.
15Beholde, if he withholde the waters, they drye vp: yf he let them go, they destroy the earth.
9Let the starres of that night be dimme thorowe darkenesse of it, let it loke for light, but haue none, neither let it see the dawning of the day:
17The morning is to them euen as the shadow of death: if one know them, they are in the terrours of the shadowe of death,
10The mountaynes sawe thee and they trembled, the streame of the water passed by, the deepe made a noyse, and lift vp his handes on hye.