Psalms 107:23
Such as go downe to the sea in ships and folowe their busines in great waters:
Such as go downe to the sea in ships and folowe their busines in great waters:
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24they see the workes of God, and his wonders in the deepe.
25For he commaundeth and causeth a stormie winde to arise: and he lifteth vp on high his waues.
26Then they ascende vp to heauen, and come downe agayne to the deepe: so that their soule melteth away through trouble.
27They reele to and fro, and they do stacker like a drunken man: and their wysdome fayleth them.
28And they cry vnto god in their trouble: who deliuereth the out of their distresse.
29For he maketh the storme to ceasse: so that the waues therof are still.
30Then be they glad because they are at rest: and he bringeth them to the hauen where they woulde be.
31O that men would confesse vnto god: his louyng kyndnes and meruaylous actes done to the chyldren of men.
25So is the sea it selfe large and wyde in compasse: wherein are thinges creeping innumerable, both small and great beastes.
26There go the shippes, and there is that Leuiathan: whom thou hast made to take his pastime therin.
27These wayte all vpon thee: that thou mayest geue them meate in due season.
21O that men would confesse vnto God: his louing kindnes and his marueylous actes done to the chyldren of men.
22And that they would offer vnto him sacrifices of thankes geuing: and set foorth in wordes his workes with a ioyfull noyse.
29All that handle the ore, mariners, and all shipmaisters of the sea, shall come downe from their ships, and stand vpon the lande.
25The ships of Tharsis were the chiefe of thyne occupying: thus thou wast replenished and in great worship, euen in the mids of the sea.
26Thy rowers haue brought thee into great waters, the east wind hath broken thee in the mids of the sea.
27Thy riches, and thy fayres, thy marchaundise, thy mariners, & shipmasters, thy calkars, and the occupiers of thy marchaundise, and al thy men of warre that are in thee, and all thy multitude that is in the mids of thee, shall fal in the mids of the sea, in the day of thy fall.
11And they saide vnto him: What shal we do vnto thee, that the sea may be calme vnto vs? For the sea wrought and was troublous.
12And he saide vnto them, Take me, and cast me into the sea, and the sea shalbe calme vnto you: for I know that for my sake this great tempest is vpon you.
13Neuerthelesse, the men assayed with rowing to bring the shippe to lande, but they could not, because the sea wrought, and was troublous against them.
27And Hiram sent by shippe also of his seruauntes, that were shipmen and had knowledge of the sea, with the seruauntes of Solomon:
33When thy wares went foorth of the seas, thou filledst many people: the kinges of the earth hast thou made riche, thorowe the multitude of thy riches and marchaundise.
34When thou shalt be broken by the seas in the deapthes of the waters, thy marchaundise & all thy multitude that was in the mids of thee, shall fall.
14They shall lift vp their voyce, and make a merie noyse: and in magnifiyng of the Lorde shall they crye out of the west.
7Let the sea make a noyse, and that is within it: the rounde worlde, and they that dwell therin.
4Beholde also ye shippes, which though they be so great, and are dryuen of fierce windes, yet are they turned about with a very small helme, whither soeuer the violence of the gouernour wyll.
39And when it was day, they knewe not the lande: but they spyed a certayne hauen with a banke, into the which they were mynded, yf it were possible, to thrust in the shippe.
40And when they had taken vp the anckers, they committed themselues vnto the sea, and loosed the rudder bondes, and hoyssed vp the mayne sayle to the wynde, and drewe to lande.
41And when they fell into a place which had the sea on both sydes, they thrust in the shippe: And the forepart stucke fast & moued not, but the hynder part brake with the violence of the waues.
23And they lauched foorth: But as they sayled he fell a slepe, and there came downe a storme on the lake, and they were fylled with water, and were in ieoperdie.
4But the Lorde sent out a great winde into the sea, and there was a mightie tempest in the sea, so that the shippe was in daunger of splitting in sunder.
5Then the maryners were afrayde, and cryed euery man vnto his God, and cast the wares that were in the shippe into the sea, to lighten it of them: but Ionas was gone downe into the sides of the shippe, & he laye downe sleeping.
8the foules of the ayre, and the fishe of the sea, and whatsoeuer swymmeth in the seas.
17Which they toke vp, and vsed helpe, and made fast the shippe, fearyng least they shoulde fall into the Syrtes: And so they let downe a vessel, & were caried.
18The next day, when we were tossed with an exceading tempest, they lighted the shippe,
24And beholde, there arose a great tempest in the sea, in so much that the shippe was couered with waues: but he was a slepe.
7He gathereth the waters of the sea together as it were vpon an heape: and layeth vp the deepe as treasures.
30And as the shypmen were about to flee out of the shippe, when they had let downe the boate into the sea, vnder a colour, as though they woulde haue cast anckers out of the foreshippe,
37And there arose a great storme of wynde, and the waues dasshed into the shippe, so that it was nowe full.
16Thus saith the Lorde, euen he that maketh away in the sea, and a foote path in the mightie waters.
10Thou diddest blowe with thy wynde, the sea couered the, they sanke as leade in the myghtie waters.
7And they beckened vnto their felowes, which were in the other shippe, that they shoulde come, and helpe them. And they came, and fylled both the shippes, that they suncke agayne.
13And they cry vnto god in their trouble: who deliuereth the out of their distresse.
15So they toke vp Ionas, and cast him into the sea, and the sea left raging.
9The auncient and wyse men of Gebal were in thee, thy stoppers of chinkes: all shippes of the sea with their shipmen were in thee, to occupie thy marchaundise.
7Thou didst breake the shippes of the sea: through the east wynde.
7Who stilleth the raging of the sea, and the noyse of his waues: and the vprore of the people.
17For at one houre so great ryches is come to naught. And euery shippe gouernour, & all they that occupie shippes, and shippemen which worke in the sea, stoode a farre of,