Psalms 19:2
A day occasioneth talke therof vnto a day: and a night teacheth knoweledge vnto a nyght.
A day occasioneth talke therof vnto a day: and a night teacheth knoweledge vnto a nyght.
These verses are found using AI-powered semantic similarity based on meaning and context. Results may occasionally include unexpected connections.
1To the chiefe musition, a psalme of Dauid. The heauens declare the glorie of God: and the firmament sheweth his handy worke.
3No language, no wordes, no voyce of theirs is hearde:
4yet their sounde goeth into all landes, and their wordes into the endes of the worlde.In them he hath set a tabernacle for the sunne:
5which commeth foorth as a bridegrome out of his chamber, and reioyceth as a giaunt to runne his course.
6His settyng foorth is from the vtmost part of heauen, and his circuite vnto the vtmost part therof: and there is nothing hyd from his heat.
19For that that may be knowen of God, is manifest among them, because God hath shewed it vnto them.
20For his inuisible thinges, being vnderstanded by his workes, through the creation of the worlde, are seene, that is, both his eternall power and godhead: So that they are without excuse.
19He hath made the moone for certayne seasons: and the sunne knoweth his goyng downe.
20Thou makest darknes and it is night: wherein all the beastes of the forrest do go abrode.
14And God sayde: let there be lyghtes in the firmament of the heauen, that they may deuide the day and the nyght, and let them be for signes, & seasons, and for dayes, and yeres.
15And let them be for lyghtes in the firmament of the heauen, that they maye geue light vpo the earth: and it was so.
16And God made two great lyghtes: a greater lyght to rule the day, and a lesse lyght to rule the nyght, and he made starres also.
17And God set them in the firmament of the heauen, to shyne vpon the earth,
18And to rule the day and nyght, and to make difference betweene the lyght and the darknesse: and God saw that it was good.
19And the euenyng and the mornyng were the fourth day.
2To set foorth in wordes thy louyng kyndnesse early in the mornyng: and thy trueth in the nyght season.
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.
16The day is thine, & the nyght is thine: thou hast prepared the light & the sunne.
12Chaunging the night into day, and the light approching into darkenesse.
8And God called the firmament the heauen: and the euenyng and the mornyng were the seconde day.
10He hath compassed the waters with certayne boundes, vntill the day and night come to an ende.
6The heauens haue declared his iustice: and all the people haue seene his glorie.
2Syng ye vnto God and blesse his name: set foorth in wordes from day to day his saluation.
16And so I applied my minde to learne wysdome, and to knowe the trauayle that is in the worlde, and that of suche a fashion, that I suffred not mine eyes to sleepe neither day nor night.
35Thus saith the Lorde, which gaue the sunne to be a lyght for the day, and the moone and the starres to shine in the night, whiche moueth the sea, so that the fluddes thereof waxe fierce, his name is the Lorde of hoastes.
5And God called the light day, and the darknes night: and the euenyng & the mornyng were the first day.
19With wysdome hath the Lorde layde the foundation of the earth, and thorow vnderstanding hath he stablished the heauens.
20Thorow his knowledge the deapthes are broken vp, and the cloudes droppe downe the deawe.
6For the Lorde geueth wisdome, out of his mouth commeth knowledge and vnderstandyng.
23Sing vnto the Lorde all the earth: and shewe from day to day his saluation.
3For I will consider thy heauens, euen the workes of thy fingers: the moone and the starres whiche thou hast ordayned.
22He reuealeth the deepe & secrete thinges, he knoweth the thing that lieth in darknesse, for the light dwelleth with him.
19That thou mayest put thy trust in the Lorde, I haue shewed thee this day the thing that thou knowest.
5The sunne aryseth, the sunne goeth downe, and returneth to his place, that he may there ryse vp agayne.
15My mouth shall dayly speake of thy ryghteousnesse and saluation: for I knowe no ende therof.
8Or the encrease of the earth, and it shall shew thee: or the fishes of the sea, and they shall certifie thee.
16Hast thou knowen the varietie of the cloudes, and the wonderous workes of him which is perfect in knowledge?
2Before the sunne, the light, the moone, and starres be darkened, and or the cloudes turne agayne after the rayne:
19Teache vs what we shall saye vnto him: for we are vnmeete to frame our talke because of darkenesse.
19We haue also a ryght sure worde of prophesie, wherevnto yf ye take heede, as vnto a lyght that shyneth in a darke place, ye do well, vntyll the day dawne, and the day starre arise in your heartes.
23Man goeth foorth to his worke: and to do his seruice vntyll the euening.
22Yet therefore shall not sowyng tyme and haruest, colde and heate, sommer and wynter, day and nyght, ceasse all the dayes of the earth.
8They also that dwel in the vtmost partes of the earth be afrayde at thy signes: thou makest them reioyce at the going foorth of the morning and euenyng.
18The path of the righteous shineth, as the light that is euer bryghter and bryghter vnto the perfect day.
6The sunne shal not hurt thee by day: neither the moone by nyght.
14For the earth shalbe filled with the knowledge of the glorie of the Lorde, as the waters couer the sea.
2Who is decked with light as it were with a garment: spreadyng out the heauens like a curtayne.
29Who can consider the spreadinges out of his cloudes, the coueringes of his tabernacle?
12Hast thou geue the morning his charge since thy dayes, and shewed the day spring his place,