Job 15:3
Thou reprouest wt wordes, that are nothinge wroth: and speakest the thinges, which can do no good.
Thou reprouest wt wordes, that are nothinge wroth: and speakest the thinges, which can do no good.
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2 Shulde a wyse man geue soch an answere (as it were one that spake in the wynde) and fyll his stomacke with anger?
3 Shall not thy vayne wordes come yet to an ende? Or, hast thou yet eny more to saye?
25 Wherfore blame ye then the wordes, that are well and truly spoken?
26 which of you can reproue them? Sauynge only that ye are sotyll to check mens sayenges, and can speake many wordes in the wynde.
2 Shulde not he that maketh many wordes, be answered? Shulde he that bableth moch, be commended therin?
3 Shulde men geue eare vnto the only? Thou wilt laugh other men to scorne, & shal no body mocke the agayne?
3 Where is ye coucell yt thou shuldest geue him, which hath no wy?dome? Wilt thou so shewe thine excellent rightuousnes?
4 Before whom hast thou spoken those wordes? Who made the breth to come out of ye mouth?
9 For he saieth: Though a ma be good, yet is he naught before God.
16 Therfore hath Iob opened his mouth but in vayne, ad folishly hath he made so many wordes.
15 What maner of felowe is the Allmightie, that we shulde serue him? What profit shulde we haue, to submitte oure selues vnto him?
5 Wolde God ye kepte youre tonge, that ye might be taken for wyse men.
6 Therfore heare my wordes, and pondre the sentence of my lippes.
7 Will ye make answere for God with lyes, and mateyne him with disceate?
13 yt thy mynde is so puft vp agaynst God & lettest soch wordes go out of thy mouth?
2 Maye a man be copared vnto God in wy?dome, though he seme to himself, for to be like him?
3 What pleasure hath God in yt thou art rightuous? Or what doth it profite him, yt thy waies are perfecte?
4 Is he afrayed to reproue the, & to steppe forth wt the in to iudgment?
3 The wordes of his mouth are vnrightuousnesse and disceate, he wil not be lerned to do good.
35 As for Iob he hath nether spoken to the purpose ner wysely.
23 Diliget labor bryngeth riches, but where many vayne wordes are, truly there is scarcenesse.
14 Neuerthelesse, seynge he hath not spoken vnto me, therfore will not I answere him as ye haue done
13 Why doest thou then stryue agaynst him, because he geueth the no accomptes of all his doinges?
9 What hath a ma els (that doth eny thinge) but weerynesse and laboure?
14 How shulde I then answere him? or, what wordes shulde I fynde out agaynst him?
2 what is he, that hydeth his mynde with foolysh wordes?
20 Shal it be tolde him, what I saye? Shulde a man speake, or shulde he kepe it backe?
4 As for shame, thou hast set it asyde, els woldest thou not make so many wordes before God:
13 The begynnynge of his talkynge is foolishnes, and the last worde of his mouth is greate madnesse.
3 Neuerthelesse I am purposed to talke with the Allmightie, and my desyre is to comon with God.
2 Yf we begynne to comon with the, peradueture thou wilt be myscontent, but who can witholde himself from speakynge?
2 Can he that stryueth with the Allmightie, be at rest? Shulde not he which disputeth with God, geue him an answere?
30 Stryue not lightly wt eny man, where as he hath done ye no harme.
9 Tel nothinge in to ye eares of a foole, for he wyl despyse the wy?dome of thy wordes.
3 Seinge thou sayest so, how doest thou knowe it? What thinge hast thou more excellet, the I yt am a synner?
30 He shal neuer come out of darcknesse, the flame shal drye vp his braunches, with ye blast of the mouth of God shal he be take awaie.
16 What helpeth it to geue a foole money in his hode, where as he hath no mynde to bye wy?dome?
9 As for folish questions, and genealogies, and braulynges and stryuynges aboute ye lawe, auoyde the, for they are vnprofitable and vayne.
14 like as the kynges ad lordes of ye earth, which buylde them selues speciall places:
2 when wil ye make an ende of youre wordes? Marcke well, and considre, we wil speake also.
3 Yf he wil argue with him, he shall not be able to answere him vnto one amonge a thousande.
3 Thinkest thou it now well done, to open thine eyes vpon soch one, and to brynge me before the in iudgment?
5 but make ye foole an answere to his foolishnesse, lest he be wyse in his owne coceate.
3 For what els hath a ma, of all the labor yt he taketh vnder the Sonne?
9 Shal that helpe you, when he calleth you to rekenynge? Thynke ye to begyle him, as a man is begyled?
3 Wyll he make many fayre wordes with the (thynkest thou) or flatre the:
4 he is puft vp, and knoweth nothinge, but waysteth his brayne aboute questions and stryuynges of wordes: wherof sprynge envye, stryfe, raylinges, euell surmysinges,
19 Where moch bablinge is, there must nedes be offence: he that refrayneth his lippes, is wysest of all.
3 Thinkest thou it well done, to oppresse me, to cast me of (beinge a worke of thy hondes) and to manteyne the councell of the vngodly?
4 Is it with a man, that I make this disputacio? Which yf it were so, shulde not my sprete be the in sore trouble?