Ecclesiastes 4:11
Agayne, when two slepe together, they are warme: but how can a body be warme alone?
Agayne, when two slepe together, they are warme: but how can a body be warme alone?
These verses are found using AI-powered semantic similarity based on meaning and context. Results may occasionally include unexpected connections.
8There is one man, no mo but himself alone, hauynge nether childe ner brother: yet is there no ende of his carefull trauayle, his eyes can not be satisfied with riches, (yet doth he not remembre himself, & saye:) For whom do I take soch trauayle? For whose pleasure do I thus consume awaye my lyfe? This is also a vayne and miserable thinge.
9Therfore two are better then one, for they maye well enioye the profit of their laboure.
10Yf one of them fall, his companyon helpeth him vp againe: But wo is him that is alone, for yf he fall, he hath not another to helpe him vp.
12One maye be ouercome, but two maye make resistauce: A thre folde cable is not lightly broken.
16One is so ioyned to another, that no ayre can come in:
17Yee one hangeth so vpon another, and sticke so together, that they can not be sundered.
3Maye twaine walke together excepte they be agreed amonge them selues?
27Maye a man take fyre in his bosome, and his clothes not be brent?
28Or can one go vpon hote coales, and his fete not be hurte?
18And the LORDE God sayde: It is not good yt ma shulde be alone. I wil make him an helpe, to beare him copany.
11Wherfore comforte youre selues together, and edifye one another, euen as ye do.
17Like as one yro whetteth another, so doth one man comforte another.
1And wha kinge Dauid was olde & well strycke in age, he coulde not be warme, though he was couered with clothes.
2Then sayde his seruauntes vnto him: Let vs seke a yonge damsell a virgin for oure lorde the kynge, to stonde before the kynge, and to norish him, & to slepe in his armes, and to warme oure lorde the kynge.
31And as for the glory of these thinges, it shalbe turned to drie strawe, and he that made them to a sparke. And they shal both burne together, so that no man shalbe able to quench them.
7They are the cause yt so many men are naked and bare, hauynge no clothes to couer them and kepe them from colde:
17He is a frende that allwaye loueth, and in aduersite a man shal knowe who is his brother.
1Beholde, how good & ioyfull a thinge it is, brethre to dwell together in vnite. It is like yt precious oyntment vpon the heade, that ranne downe vnto the beerd, eue vnto Aarons beerd, & wete downe to the skyrtes of his clothinge.
8and they two shalbe one flesh. Now are they not twayne the, but one flesh.
6Euery man hath exorted his neghboure, and brother, and bydden him be stronge.
7The Smyth conforted the moulder, & the Ironsmyth the hammerman, sayenge: It shalbe good, that we fasten this cast worke: and then they fastened it with nales, that it shulde not be moued.
19Haue I sene eny man perish thorow nakednes & want of clothinge? Or, eny poore man for lack of rayment,
20whose sydes thanked me not, because he was warmed wt ye woll of my shepe?
20For ye bedde shalbe so narow yt a ma ca not lye vpon it. And the coueringe to small, that a ma maye not wynde him self therin.
24For this cause shal a man leaue father and mother, and cleue vnto his wife, & they two shalbe one flesh.
15If a brother or a sister be naked or destitute of dayly fode,
16& one of you saye vnto them: Departe in peace, God sende you warmnes and fode: notwithstodinge ye geue them not tho thinges which are nedfull to the body: what helpeth it them?
11Dearly beloued, yf God so loued vs, we oughte also to loue one another.
11Neuertheles nether is the man without ye woman, nether the woman without the ma in the LORDE.
18Wherfore comforte youre selues one another with these wordes.
34I saye vnto you: In yt night shal two lye vpon one bed, the one shalbe receaued, the other shalbe for saken.
14Where no good councel is there the people decaye: but where as are many that can geue councell, there is wealth.
6His left hade lyeth vnder my heade, & his right hande enbraceth me.
24A frende that delyteth in loue, doth a man more fredshipe, and sticketh faster vnto him then a brother.
5& sayde: For this cause shal a ma leaue father & mother, & cleue vnto his wife, & they two shalbe one fleshe.
6Now are they not twayne then, but one flesh. Let not man therfore put a sunder, yt which God hath coupled together.
6One handfull (saieth he) is better wt rest, the both ye handes full with labor and trauayle.
11Yf two men stryue together, and the wyfe of one renne to, to delyuer hir husbande from the hande of him that smyteth him, & put forth hir hande, and take him by the secretes,
3yee him that is yet vnborne to be better at ease the they both, because he seith not the miserable workes that are done vnder the Sonne.
2He shalbe vnto me, as a defence for the wynde, and as a refuge for the tempest, like as a ryuer of water in a thurstie place, and ye schadowe of a greate rock in a drie lode.
14Let death come hastely vpon them, and let them go downe quick into hell, for wickednes is amonge them in their dwellinges.
6Forsake her not, and she shal preserue the: loue her, and she shal kepe the.
17and how thy clothes are warme, whe the lode is still thorow the south wynde?
15And I perceaued, yt all men lyuynge vnder the Sonne, go wt the seconde childe, that commeth vp in the steade of the other.
31For this cause shal a man leaue father and mother, and cleue vnto his wife, and they two shal be one flesh:
18& on the thirde daye after that I was delyuered, she was delyuered of a childe also. And we were together, so yt there was no straunger in ye house, but we two:
14Vse well the tyme of prosperite, and remembre the tyme of mysfortune: for God maketh the one by the other, so that a man can fynde nothinge els.
4Riches make many frendes, but the poore is forsake of his owne frendes.
11A vayne thinge is it to cast out many wordes, but what hath a man els?
18Come, let vs lye together, & take oure pleasure till it be daye light.