Proverbs 25:13
Like as the wynter coole in the haruest, so is a faithfull messaunger to him that sent him, & refre?sheth his masters mynde.
Like as the wynter coole in the haruest, so is a faithfull messaunger to him that sent him, & refre?sheth his masters mynde.
These verses are found using AI-powered semantic similarity based on meaning and context. Results may occasionally include unexpected connections.
25A good reporte out of a farre countre, is like colde water to a thyrstie soule.
26A righteous man fallynge downe before the vngodly, is like a troubled well and a sprynge yt is destroyed.
14Who so maketh greate boastes & geueth nothinge, is like cloudes & wynde without rayne.
15With pacience maye a prynce be pacified, & wt a soft tonge maye rigorousnes be broke.
11A worde spoken in due season, is like apples of golde in a syluer dyshe.
12The correccion of the wyse is to an obedient eare, a golden cheyne and a Iewel of golde.
17An vngodly messauger bryngeth myschefe, but a faithfull embassitoure is wholsome.
1Like as snowe is not mete in sommer, ner rayne in haruest: euen so is worshipe vnsemely for a foole.
15He sendeth forth his comaundemet vpo earth, his worde runeth swiftly.
16He geueth snowe like woll, & scatereth ye horefrost like ashes.
17He casteth forth his yse like morsels, who is able to abyde his frost?
18He sendeth out his worde and melteth them, he bloweth wt his wynde, & the waters flowe.
13Righteous lippes are pleasaut vnto kynges, and they loue him yt speaketh ye trueth.
14The kynges displeasure is a messaunger of death, but a wyse man wyl pacifie him.
15The cherefull countenauce of ye kynge is life, and his louynge fauor is as the euenynge dewe.
20Who so syngeth a songe to a wicked herte, clotheth hi with ragges in the colde, and poureth vyneger vpon chalke.
18Who so kepeth his fyge tre, shal enioye the frutes therof: he that wayteth vpon his master, shal come to honoure.
22for so shalt thou heape coales offyre vpo his heade, and the LORDE shal rewarde the.
23The north wynde dryueth awaye the rayne, euen so doth an earnest sober countenauce a backbyters tonge.
10And like as the rayne & snowe cometh downe from heaue, & returneth not thither agayne, but watereth the earth, maketh it frutefull & grene, that it maye geue corne & breade vnto the sower:
23O how ioyfull a thinge is it, a man to geue a conuenient answere? O how pleasaunt is a worde spoken in due season?
45Who is now a faithfull and wyse seruaut, whom his lorde hath made ruler ouer his houssholde, that he maye geue them meate in due season?
46Blessed is yt seruaut, whom his lorde (whan he cometh) shal fynde so doynge.
21He that delicately bryngeth vp his seruaunt from a childe, shal make him his master at length.
16Verely verely I saye vnto you: the seruaunt is not greater then his lorde, nether is the Apostell greater then he that sent him.
2For like as a bonde seruaunt desyreth the shadowe, and as an hyrelinge wolde fayne haue an ende of his worke:
43Blessed is that seruaunt, whom his lorde (whan he cometh) shal fynde so doynge.
25Heuynesse discorageth ye herte of man, but a good worde maketh it glad agayne.
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
42And who soeuer geueth vnto one of the least of these a cupp of colde water onely to drinke, in ye name of a disciple, verely I saie vnto you: he shal not lose his rewarde.
35A discrete seruaunt is a pleasure vnto ye kynge, but one yt is not honest, prouoketh him vnto wrath.
26As vyneger is to the teth, and as smoke is vnto ye eyes, eue so is a slogish personne to them that sende him forth.
12This shal bringe rest, yf one refresh the weery, ye this shal bringe rest. But they had no will to heare.
4for thus hath ye LORDE sayde vnto me. I layde me downe, and pondred the matter in my house, at the noone daye when it was hote: and there fel a myslinge shower, like a dew, as it happeneth in haruest.
9Exhorte the seruauntes, to be obedient vnto their masters, to please in all thinges, not answeringe agayne,
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.
5the boostinge of the vngodly, thou kepest men from heate with the shadow of the cloudes, thou cuttest of the braunches of tyrauntes.
7Wherof the mower fylleth not his hande, nether he that byndeth vp the sheaues, his bosome.
8Fyre and hayle, snowe & vapors wynde and storme, fulfillynge his worde.
24Fayre wordes are an hony combe, a refreshinge of ye mynde, & health of ye bones.
9And ye masters, do euen the same vnto the, puttynge awaye threatenynges, and knowe that euen youre master also is in heauen, nether is there eny respecte of personnes with him.
30The frute of the rightuous is as the tre of life, a wyse man also wynneth mens soules.
23They wayted for me, as the earth doth for the rayne: & gaped vpon me, as the groude doth to receaue the latter shower.
4As the lighte is in ye mornynge whan the Sonne aryseth, so that for the brightnesse therof no cloude remayneth: and as the grasse loketh vpon the earth thorow the rayne,
25But they yt rebuke ye vngodly shalbe comended, & a riche blessinge shal come vpo the.
21Syluer is tryed in the moulde, & golde in the fornace, & so is a man, whan he is openly praysed to his face.
25For I shall fede the hongrie soule, and refresh all faynte hertes.
24The disciple is not aboue the master, nether the seruaunt aboue the LORDE.
16But they that feare the horefrost, the snowe shal fall vpon them.
11For the wordes of ye wyse are like prickes and nales that go thorow, wherwith men are kepte together: for they are geuen of one shepherde onely.