Psalms 90:4
For a thousande yeres in thy syght are but as yestarday that is past: and as a watch in the nyght.
For a thousande yeres in thy syght are but as yestarday that is past: and as a watch in the nyght.
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5Thou makest them to flowe away, they are a sleepe: they be in the morning as an hearbe that groweth.
6In the mornyng it florisheth and groweth vp: in the euenyng it is cut downe and wythered.
7For we be consumed through thy displeasure: and we are astonyed through thy wrathfull indignation.
8Thou hast set our misdeedes before thee: and our sinnes wherof we be not priuie, in the lyght of thy countenaunce.
9For all our dayes do passe in thine anger: we spende our yeres as in speaking a worde.
10The dayes of our yeres be in all threescore yeres and tenne, and yf through strength of nature men come to foure score yeres: yet is their iolitie but labour and care, yea moreouer it passeth in haste from vs, and we flee from it.
11Who regardeth the force of thy wrath? for euen there after as a man feareth thee, so feeleth he thy displeasure.
12Make vs to knowe so our dayes, that we number them: and we wyll frame a heart vnto wisdome.
13Turne agayne O God (what, for euer wylt thou be angry?) and be gratious vnto thy seruauntes.
1A prayer of Moyses the man of God. Lorde thou hast ben our habitation: from one generation to another generation.
2Before the moutaynes were brought foorth, or euer the earth & the worlde were made: thou art God both from euerlastyng, and also vntyll euerlastyng.
3Thou turnest man most miserable euen vnto dust: thou sayest also, O ye children of men returne you into dust.
8Dearely beloued, be not ignoraunt of this one thyng, howe that one day is with the Lorde as a thousande yere, & a thousande yere as one day.
4Man is lyke a thyng of naught: his dayes be lyke a shadowe that passeth away.
4Hast thou fleshy eyes? or doest thou loke as a man loketh?
5Or are thy dayes as the dayes of man? and thy yeres as mans yeres?
9(For we are but of yesterday, and consider not that our dayes vpon earth are but a shadowe.)
4O God make me to knowe mine ende, and the number of my dayes: that I may be certified howe long I haue to lyue.
5Behold thou hast made my dayes as it were an hand breadth long, & mine age is euen as nothing before thee: truely euery man is al together vanitie. Selah.
11They shall perishe, but thou endurest, and they shall waxe olde as doth a garment:
12And as a vesture shalt thou folde the vp, and they shalbe chaunged: but thou art the same, & thy yeres shall not fayle.
4One generation passeth away, another commeth: but the earth abideth styll.
24But I say, O my God take me not away in the middest of myne age: as for thy yeres, they endure throughout all generations.
25Thou hast before tyme layde the foundation of the earth: and the heauens are the worke of thy handes.
26They shall perishe, but thou wylt remayne styll: they all shall waxe olde as doth a garment, and as a vesture thou wylt chaunge them, and they shalbe chaunged.
27But thou art, and thy yeres can not fayle:
46O God howe long wylt thou hyde thy selfe? for euer? shall thy wrath burne lyke fire?
47Remember what I am, howe short my tyme is of lyfe: wherfore hast thou created in vayne all the sonnes of men?
20They shalbe smitten from the morning vnto the euening: yea they shall perishe for euer, when no man regardeth them.
4Blessed is he vnto whom the God of Iacob is an ayde: his trust is in God his Lorde.
15The dayes of man are as the dayes of an hearbe: he florisheth as a flowre in the fielde.
16For the winde passeth ouer it, and it is no more seene: and the place therof knoweth it no more.
13In the thoughtes and visions of the night when sleepe commeth on men,
5I dyd thynke vpon the dayes past: and on the yeres of the olde worlde.
16The day is thine, & the nyght is thine: thou hast prepared the light & the sunne.
10For one day in thy courtes, is better then a thousande els where: I had rather be a doore keper in the house of my God, then to dwell in large tabernacles of vngodlynes.
2Euer since the worlde began, thy throne hath ben set sure: thou art from euerlastyng.
12So man after he is asleepe ryseth not, he shall not wake tyll the heauens be no more, nor rise out of his sleepe.
15For we be but straungers before thee, and soiourners, as were al our fathers: Our dayes on the earth also are but as a shadowe, and there is none abiding.
11My dayes are past, and my counsailes and thoughtes of my heart are vanished away,
12Chaunging the night into day, and the light approching into darkenesse.
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.
49Lorde where are become thy former olde louyng kyndnesses: which thou dydst sweare vnto Dauid by thy fayth that thou wouldest perfourme.
5The dayes of man surely are determined, the number of his monethes are knowen onely vnto thee, thou hast appoynted him his bondes which he can not go beyonde.
11My dayes fade away lyke a shadowe: and I am wythered lyke grasse.
12But thou O God endurest for euer: and thy remembraunce throughout all generations.
20They be as a dreame to a man after he is once waked: O Lorde thou wylt cause their image to be dispised in the citie.
18Whyle we loke not on the thynges whiche are seene, but on the thynges which are not seene. For the thynges which are seene, are temporall: but the things which are not seene, are eternal.
4As it stoode with me when I was young, when God prospered my house:
18I go about to count them, I fynde that they are mo in number then the sande: and yet whyle I am wakyng I am styll with thee.