Job 3:22

Coverdale Bible (1535)

they wolde be maruelous glad, as those that dygge vp treasure)

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Similar Verses (AI)

These verses are found using AI-powered semantic similarity based on meaning and context. Results may occasionally include unexpected connections.

  • Job 3:20-21
    2 verses
    87%

    20Wherfore is the light geuen, to him that is in mysery? and life vnto them, that haue heuy hertes?

    21(Which longe for death, and it commeth not: for yf they might fynde their graue,

  • 23To the man whose waye is hyd, which God kepeth backe from him.

  • 22Wherfore I perceaue, yt there is nothyinge better for a man, then to be ioyfull in his laboure, for that is his porcion. But who wil brynge him to se the thinge, that shal come after him?

  • 2Wherfore I iudged those that are deed, to be more happie then soch as be alyue:

  • Job 14:13-14
    2 verses
    72%

    13O that thou woldest kepe me, and hyde me in the hell, vntill thy wrath were stilled: & to appoynte me a tyme, wherin thou mightest remembre me.

    14Maye a deed man lyue agayne? All the dayes of this my pilgremage am I lokynge, when my chaunginge shal come.

  • Job 21:32-33
    2 verses
    72%

    32Yet shal he be brought to his graue, and watch amonge the heape of the deed.

    33The shal he be fayne to be buried amoge the stones by the broke syde. All men must folowe him, & there are innumerable gone before him.

  • 13Well is him that fyndeth wy?dome, & opteyneth vnderstondinge,

  • Job 21:25-26
    2 verses
    71%

    25Another dyeth in sorowe and heuynesse, and neuer had good daies.

    26Now slepe they both a like in the earth, & the wormes couer them.

  • 12So I perceaued, yt in these thinges there is nothinge better for a man, the to be mery & to do well so longe as he lyueth.

  • 13They spende their dayes in welthynesse: but sodenly they go downe to hell.

  • 18For hell prayseth not the, death doth not magnifie the. They that go downe into the graue, prayse not thy treuth:

  • 16All that I haue, shall go downe in to the pytt, & lye with me in the dust.

  • 25For who maye eate, drynke, or brynge eny thige to passe without him? And why?

  • 10What so euer thou takest in hande to do, that do with all thy power: for amoge the deed (where as thou goest vnto) there is nether worke, councell, knowlege ner wy?dome.

  • 12let us swalowe the vp like ye hell, let us deuoure the quycke and whole, as those that go downe in to the pytt.

  • 13Though I tary neuer so moch, yet the graue is my house, and I must make my bed in the darcke.

  • 22His soule draweth on to destruccion, & his life to death.

  • 20For he thinketh not moch how longe he shal lyue, for so moch as God fylleth his hert with gladnesse.

  • 3O that I might se him & fynde him: O that I might come before his seate,

  • 19Lo, thus is it wt him, that reioyseth in his owne doinges: and as for other, they growe out of the earth.

  • 70%

    5For in death no man remebreth the: Oh who wil geue the thankes in the hell?

  • Eccl 7:2-3
    2 verses
    70%

    2It is better to go in to an house of mournynge, then in to a bancket house. For there is the ende of all men, and he that is lyuinge, taketh it to herte.

    3It is better to be sory then to laugh, for whe the countenaunce is heuy, the herte is ioyfull.

  • 21For whath careth he, what become of his housholde after his death? whose monethes passe awaye swifter then an arowe.

  • 14which reioyse in doynge euell, and delyte i wicked thinges:

  • 8Yf a man lyue many yeares, and be glad in them all, let him remembre the dayes of darcknesse, which shalbe many: & when they come, all thinges shalbe but vanite.

  • 17There must the wicked ceasse from their tyranny, there soch as are ouerlaboured, be at rest:

  • 19For wt ioy shal the godly, and with gladnesse shal the innocent se,

  • 17Haue the gates of death bene opened vnto the or hast thou sene the dore of euerlastige treasure?

  • 27Lo, this is the matter, as we oure selues haue proued by experience. Therfore now that thou hearest it, take better hede to thy selff.

  • 13The herte is soroufull euen in laughter, and the ende of myrth is heuynesse.

  • 24Now vse not me to do violece vnto the, yt are destroyed allready: but where hurte is done, there vse thei to helpe.

  • 5the prayse of the vngodly hath bene shorte, and that the ioye of Ypocrytes continued but ye twincklinge of an eye?

  • 15Therfore I commende gladnesse, because a man hath no better thinge vnder the Sonne, then to eate and drynke, and to be mery: for that shal he haue of his laboure all the daies of his life, which God geueth him vnder the Sonne.+

  • 10For I haue oft sene ye vngodly brought to their graues, and fallen downe from the hye and glorious place: in so moch yt they were forgotten in the cite, where they were had in so hye & greate reputacion. This is also a vayne thinge.

  • 4For they are in no parell of death, but stonde fast like a palace.

  • 7Their iudges stoble at the stone, yet heare they my wordes, yt they be ioyfull.

  • 1The sayde I thus in my hert: Now go to, I wil take myne ease & haue good dayes. But lo, that was vanite also:

  • 1My breth fayleth, my dayes are shortened, I am harde at deathes dore.

  • 23One dyeth now when he is mightie & at his best, rich and in prosperite:

  • 22Loke what lyeth hyd in darcknesse, he declareth it opely: and the very shadowe of death bringeth he to light.

  • 21Thy mouth shall he fyll with laughynge, ad thy lyppes with gladnesse.

  • 162I am as glad of thy worde, as one yt fyndeth greate spoyles.

  • 6And in those dayes shal me seke deeth, and shal not fynde it: and shal desyre to dye, and death shal flye from them.

  • 3Yf a man begett an hundreth children, and lyue many yeares, so that his dayes are many in nombre, and yet can not enioye his good, nether be buried: as for him I saye, that an vntymely byrth is better then he.

  • 6He hath set me in darcknesse, as they that be deed for euer.