Job 38:41
Who prouideth meate for the rauen, when his young ones crye vnto God, and flee about for lacke of meate?
Who prouideth meate for the rauen, when his young ones crye vnto God, and flee about for lacke of meate?
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9He geueth vnto cattell their foode: euen vnto Rauens which call for it.
38To cause the earth to grow into hardnesse, & the clots to cleaue fast together?
39Wylt thou hunt the pray for the lion? or fill the appetite of the lions whelpes,
40When they couche in their places, and tarie in the couert to lye in wayte?
24Consider the Rauens, for they neither sowe nor reape, whiche neither haue storehouse nor barne, and God feedeth them: Howe much more are ye better then fethered fowles?
4Thou shalt drinke of the ryuer, and I haue commaunded the rauens to feede thee there.
21The Lions do roare after a pray: and in seeking their meate of God.
14The Uultur, and the Kyte after his kinde,
15And all Rauens after their kinde,
6And the rauens brought him bread and fleshe in the morning, and likewyse bread and fleshe in the euening: and he drancke of the brooke.
13The Glede, the Kite, and the Uulture after their kinde.
14And all kinde of Rauens.
17Who so laugheth his father to scorne, and setteth his mothers commaundement at naught, the rauens of the valley picke out his eyes, and deuoured be he of the young Egles.
10Young Lions do lacke and suffer hunger: but they whiche seeke God, shall want no maner of thing that is good.
14Then chattered I lyke a swallowe, and lyke a crane, and mourned lyke a doue, I lift vp mine eyes into the heyght: O Lorde sayde my sicknesse kepeth me downe, ease thou me.
4The tongues of the sucking chyldren cleaue to the roofe of their mouthes for very thyrst: the young chyldren aske bread, but there is no man that geueth it them.
15Let them runne here and there for meate: and go to bed if they be not satisfied.
26Commeth it through thy wysdome that the Goshauke flieth toward the south?
27Doth the Egle mount vp, and make his nest on hye at thy comaundement?
11Which teacheth vs more the the beastes of the earth, and geueth vs more wysdome then the foules of heauen.
4Wyll a lion roare in the forest when he hath no pray? or wil a lions whelpe crye out of his denne, if he haue taken nothing?
30His young ones also sucke vp blood: and where any dead body lyeth, there is he.
27These wayte all vpon thee: that thou mayest geue them meate in due season.
11As an Egle that stirreth vp her nest, and flittereth ouer her young, & spreadeth her wynges, taketh them, and beareth them on her wynges:
13Gauest thou the faire winges vnto the pecockes, or winges and fethers vnto the Estriche?
14For she leaueth her egges in the earth, and heateth them in the dust.
2Canst thou number the monethes that they go with young? or knowest thou the time when they bring foorth?
3They lye downe, they calue their young ones, and they are deliuered of their trauaile and paine:
4Yet their young ones grow vp, and waxe fatte through good feeding with corne: They go foorth, and returne not againe vnto them.
15There shall the Owle make her nest, builde, be there at home, & bryng foorth her young ones: there shall the Kytes come together, eche one to his lyke.
8Yet in the sommer she prouideth her meate, and gathereth her foode together in the haruest.
3Yea the sparowe hath founde her an house, and the swallowe a nest: where she may lay her young: euen thy aulters O God of hoastes, my king & my Lord.
26Beholde the fowles of the ayre: For they sowe not, neither do they reape, nor cary into the barnes: yet your heauenly father feedeth them. Are ye not much better then they?
3My teares haue ben my meate day and nyght: whyle they dayly say vnto me where is nowe thy God.
5His haruest was eaten of the hungrie, & taken from among the thornes, and the thurstie drunke vp their labour: It is not the earth that bringeth foorth iniquitie,
13They gape vpon me with their mouthes: as it were a rampyng and a roryng lion.
7There is a way that the birdes knowe not, that no vultures eye hath seene:
20Surely the mountaines bring him foorth grasse, where all the beastes of the fielde take their pastime.
28Who is the father of the rayne? or who hath begotten the droppes of the deawe?
5Beholde, as wilde asses in the desert go they foorth to their worke, & ryse betimes to spoyle: Yea the very wildernesse ministreth foode for them & their children.
17The Pellicane, the Swanne, nor the Cormorant.
18O howe cattell mourne? the heardes of beastes are in wofull case for lacke of pasture, and the flockes of sheepe are destroyed?
12The foules of the ayre haue their habitation nigh vnto them: singing out of the midst of the bowes of trees.
33Yea the dead bodyes of this people shalbe eaten vp of the foules of the ayre, and wylde beastes of the earth, and no man shall fray them away.
7And he sent foorth a Rauen, whiche went out, goyng foorth, and returnyng, vntyll the waters were dryed vp vpon the earth.
28Insomuch that they haue caused the voyce of the poore to come vnto him, and now he heareth the complaint of such as are in trouble.
15The eyes of all wayte vpon thee: and thou geuest them their meate in due season.
5Doth the wild asse rore when he hath grasse? or loweth the oxe when he hath fodder inough
17Wherin the birdes make their nestes: in the fyrre trees the storke buyldeth.