Habakkuk 3:9
Thou shewdest thy bowe opely, like as thou haddest promised with an ooth vnto the trybes. Sela. Thou didest deuyde the waters of the earth.
Thou shewdest thy bowe opely, like as thou haddest promised with an ooth vnto the trybes. Sela. Thou didest deuyde the waters of the earth.
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10When the mountaynes saw the, they were afrayed, ye water streame wete awaye: the depe made a noyse at the liftinge vp of thine honde.
11The Sonne and Mone remayned still in their habitacion. Thine arowes wente out glisteringe, and thy speares as the shyne of the lightenynge.
12Thou trodest downe the londe in thine anger, and didest throsshe the Heithen in thy displeasure.
13Thou camest forth to helpe thy people, to helpe thine anoynted. Thou smotest downe the heade in the house of the vngodly, & discoueredest his foundacions, eue vnto ye necke of him. Sela.
14Thou cursest his septers, the captayne of his men of warre: which come as a stormy wynde to scatre me abrode, & are glad when they maye eat vp ye poore secretly.
15Thou makest a waye for thine horses in the see, euen in the mudde of greate waters.
6He stondeth, & measureth the earth: He loketh, & the people consume awaye, the moutaynes of ye worlde fall downe to powlder, and the hilles are fayne to bowe them selues, for his goinges are euerlastinge and sure.
7I sawe, that the pauilions of the Morians and the tentes of the londe of Madian were vexed for weerynesse.
8Wast thou not angrie (o LORDE) in the waters? was not thy wrath in the floudes, and thy displeasure in the see? yes, whe thou sattest vpon thine horse, and when thy charettes had the victory.
15Thou smytest the heades of Leuiathan in peces, & geuest him to be meate for the people in the wildernesse.
15Thou with thine arme hast delyuered thy people, euen the sonnes of Iacob and Ioseph.
16Sela. The waters sawe ye (o God) ye waters sawe ye, & were afrayed: ye depthes were moued.
17The thicke cloudes poured out water, ye cloudes thodered, and thy arowes wente abrode.
18Thy thonder was herde rounde aboute, the lighteninges shone vpon the grounde, the earth was moued and shoke withall.
3There breaketh he the arowes of the bowe, ye shylde, the swerde & the whole battayll.
4Sela. Thou art of more honoure & might the the hilles of robbers.
4LORDE, whan thou wentest out from Seir, & camest in from the felde of Edom, ye earth quaked, the heauen dropped, and the cloudes dropped with water.
5Good lucke haue thou with thine honoure, ryde on with the treuth, mekenesse & rightuousnes: & thy right hode shal teach ye woderfull thinges.
15The springes of waters were sene, & the foundacios of the roude worlde were discouered at yi chiding (o LORDE) at the blastinge & breth of thy displeasure.
10Thou rulest the pryde of the see, thou stillest the wawes therof, whe they arise.
3Thou art the fayrest amonge the children of me, full of grace are thy lippes, therfore God blesseth the for euer.
9Thou o God sendest a gracious rayne vpon thyne enheritauce, & refreshest it, when it is drye.
12When thou stretchedest out yi right hande, the earth swalowed them vp.
13But God is my kynge of olde, the helpe that is done vpon earth he doth it himself.
6Thy right hande (O LORDE) is glorious in power: thy right hade (O LORDE) hath smytten the enemies.
7And with thy greate glory thou hast destroyed thine aduersaries: thou sentest out yi wrath, & it cosumed them, euen as stobble.
6Sende forth the lightenynge & scater the, shute out thine arowes and consume them.
3Though the waters of the see raged & were neuer so troublous, & though the mountaynes shoke at the tepest of the same.
35He teacheth my handes to fighte, and bendeth the stele bowe with myne armes.
12He hath bent his bowe, and made me as it were a marck to shute at.
13The arowes of his quyuer hath he shot, euen in to my reynes.
3In the daye of thy power shal thy people offre the frewill offeringes with an holy worshipe, ye dewe of thy byrth is of the wobe of the mornynge.
11And the reed See partedst thou in sunder before them, so that they wete thorow the myddes of the See drye shod: & their persecuters threwest thou in to the depe as a stone, in the mightie waters,
10Art not thou he, that hast wounded that proude lucifer, and hewen the dragon in peces? Art not thou euen he, which hast dried vp the depe of the see, which hast made playne the see grounde, that the delyuered might go thorow?
15Loke downe then from heaue, and beholde the dwellinge place of thy sanctuary & thy glory. How is it, yt thy gelousy, thy strength, the multitude of thy mercies and thy louynge kyndnesse, wyl not be entreated of vs?
13Thou hast made the north and the south, Tabor and Hermon shal reioyse in thy name.
5What ayled the (o thou see) that thou fleddest? and thou Iordan, that thou turnedest backe?
3The see sawe that, and fled, Iordan turned backe.
6Thou couerest it with the depe like as with a garmet, so that the waters stonde aboue the hilles.
49What man is he that lyueth, and shal not se death? Maye a ma delyuer his owne soule from the honde of hell?
4He hath bent his bowe like an enemie, he hath fastened his right honde as an aduersary; and euery thinge that was pleasaut to se, he hath smyten it downe. He hath poured out his wrath like a fyre, in to the tabernacle of the doughter Sion.
7That they maye fall awaye, like water yt runneth a pace: and that when they shote their arowes, they maye be broke.
9He hath made warres to ceasse in all the worlde: he hath broken the bowe, he hath knapped the speare in sonder, & bret the charettes in the fyre.
3Vpon an instrumet of ten strynges, vpon the lute and with a songe vpon the harpe.
12Therfore shalt thou put the to flight, & with thy stringes thou shalt make ready thine arowes agaynst the faces off them.
25Yf there be no water, I wil graue & drynke. And as for waters of defence, I shal drie them vp with the fete of myne hooste.
34He teacheth myne hondes to fight, and maketh myne armes to breake euen a bowe off stele.