Job 36:32
In ye turnynge of a hande he hydeth the light, & at his commaundement it commeth agayne.
In ye turnynge of a hande he hydeth the light, & at his commaundement it commeth agayne.
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13wilt thou therfore saye: Tush, how shulde God knowe? Doth his dominion reach beyonde the cloudes?
14Tush, the cloudes couer him, yt he maye not se, for he dwelleth in heauen.
8He byndeth ye water in his cloudes, that they fall not downe together.
9He holdeth back his stole, that it caa not be sene, and spredeth his cloudes before it.
11The cloudes do their laboure in geuynge moystnesse, the cloudes poure downe their rayne.
12He distributeth also on euery syde, acordinge as it pleaseth him to deale out his workes, that they maye do, what so euer he commaundeth the thorow the whole worlde:
27He turneth ye water to smaldroppes, he dryueth his cloudes
28together for to rayne, so that they poure downe and droppe vpon men.
29He can sprede out the cloudes (a couerynge off his tabernacle)
30and cause his light to shyne vpo them, and to couer the botome of the see.
31By these thinges gouerneth he his people, and geueth the abundaunce of meate.
15Art thou of coucel with God, when he doth these thinges? When he causeth the light to come forth of his cloudes?
16Art thou of his coucell, when he spredeth out the cloudes? Hast thou the perfecte knowlege of his wonders?
3He gouerneth euery thinge vnder the heauen, and his light reacheth vnto the ende of the worlde.
4A roaringe voyce foloweth him: for his glorious magesty geueth soch a thondre clappe, that (though a man heare it) yet maye he not perceaue it afterwarde. It geueth an horrible sownde,
5when God sendeth out his voyce: greate thinges doth he, which we can not coprehende.
6When he commaundeth the snowe, it falleth vpon the earth: As soone as he geueth the rayne a charge, Immediatly the showers haue their strength and fall downe
12He made darknes his pauylion rounde aboute him, thicke water in the cloudes of ye ayre.
33The rysinge vp therof sheweth he to his frendes and to the catell.
21For euery ma seith not the light, yt he kepeth cleare in the cloudes, which he clenseth whan he maketh the wynde to blowe.
22Golde is brought out of the north, but the prayse and honoure off Gods feare commeth fro God himself.
26when he set the rayne in ordre, and gaue the mightie floudes a lawe:
34Morouer, cast thou lift vp thy voyce to ye cloudes, yt they maye poure downe a greate rayne vpo the?
35Canst thou thodre also yt they maye go their waye, & be obediet vnto the, sayege: lo, here are we?
11He made darcknesse his pauylion rounde aboute hi, with darcke water & thicke cloudes to couer him.
12At the brightnes off his presence the cloudes remoued, with hale stones & coales of fyre.
7He commaundeth the Sone, & it ryseth not: he closeth vp the starres, as it were vnder a signet.
24By what waye is the light parted, & the heate dealt out vpon earth?
25Who deuydeth the abundauce of waters in to ryuers, or who maketh a waye for the stormy wether,
26yt it watereth & moystureth ye drye & baren grounde:
16As soone as he letteth his voyce be herde, the waters in the ayre waxe fearce: He draweth vp the cloudes from the endes of the earth. He turneth ye lightenynges to rayne, he bringeth the wyndes out of their secrete places
7He bryngeth forth the cloudes from the endes of the worlde, he turneth ye lighteniges vnto rayne, bringige the wyndes out of their treasuries.
11Shuldest thou the se no darcknesse? Shulde not the water floude runne ouer the?
9When I made the cloudes to be a coueringe for it, and swedled it with ye darcke?
11Out of droppes bryngeth he greate floudes together, & the thinge that is hyd bryngeth he to light.
13At his voyce the waters gather together in the ayre, he draweth vp ye cloudes from the vttemost partes of ye earth: he turneth lighteninge to rayne, and brigeth forth the wyndes out of their treasuries:
32The waye is light after him, the depe is his walkynge place.
2Cloudes and darcknesse are rounde aboute him, rightuousnesse and iudgment are the habitacion of his seate.
2Thou deckest thy self with light, as it were wt a garment, thou spredest out the heauen like a curtayne.
3whose men of warre are innumerable, and whose light aryseth ouer all.
4The same daye be turned to darcknesse, and not regarded of God from aboue, nether be shyned vpo wt light:
5but be couered with darcknesse, and the shadowe of death. Let the dymme cloude fall vpon it, and let it be lapped in with sorowe.
37who nombreth the cloudes in wisdome? who stilleth ye vehement waters of the heaue?
29Yf he delyuer & graunte pardo, who will iudge or condemne? But yf he hyde awaye his countenaunce, who wil turne it aboute agayne, whether it be to the people or to eny man?
7When thou art put out, I will couer the heauen, and make his starres dymme. I will sprede a cloude ouer the Sonne, ad the Moone shall not geue hir light.
2before the Sonne, ye light, ye Moone and the starres be darckened, and or the cloudes turne agayne after the rayne:
44Thou hast hyd thy self in a cloude, that oure prayer shulde not go thorow.
18hast thou helped him to spred out the heauen, which is to loke vpo, as it were cast of cleare metall?
19the shewe me where light dwelleth, and where darcknes is:
6The light shalbe darcke in his dwellinge, & his candle shalbe put out with him.