Psalms 104:9
Thou hast set them their boundes, which they maie not passe, that they turne not agayne to couer ye earth.
Thou hast set them their boundes, which they maie not passe, that they turne not agayne to couer ye earth.
These verses are found using AI-powered semantic similarity based on meaning and context. Results may occasionally include unexpected connections.
5Thou hast layed ye earth vpon hir foundacion, that it neuer moueth at eny tyme.
6Thou couerest it with the depe like as with a garmet, so that the waters stonde aboue the hilles.
7But at thy rebuke they fle, at the voyce of thy thonder they are afrayed.
8Then are the hilles sene alofte, & the valleys beneth in their place which thou hast appoynted for the.
28whan he hanged the cloudes aboue: whan he fastened the sprynges of the depe:
29Whan he shutt the see within certayne bowndes, that ye waters shulde not go ouer their marckes. When he layed the foundacions of the earth,
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.
10He hath copased the waters wt certayne boundes, vntill the daye & night come to an ende.
10Thou causest the welles to sprynge vp amonge the valleys, and the waters runne amonge ye hilles.
10when I gaue it my comaundement, makynge dores & barres for it,
11sayenge: Hither to shalt thou come, but no further, and here shalt thou laye downe thy proude and hye wawes.
12Hast thou geue the mornynge his charge (as soone as thou wast borne) and shewed the dayespringe his place,
13yt it might take holde of the corners of the earth, & yt the vngodly might be shake out?
15Beholde, yf he witholde the waters, they drye vp: Yf he let the go, they destroye the earth.
13Thou watrest the hylles from aboue, the erth is fylled with ye frutes of thy workes.
17The daye is thyne, & the night is thine: thou hast prepared the lightes & the Sonne.
15Thou smytest the heades of Leuiathan in peces, & geuest him to be meate for the people in the wildernesse.
29But when thou hydest thy face, they are soroufull: yf thou takest awaye their breth, they dye, & are turned agayne to their dust.
30Agayne, when thou lattest thy breth go forth, they are made, and so thou renuest the face of the earth.
11Thou breakest the proude, like one that is wounded, thou scatrest thine enemies abrode with thy mightie arme.
6He hath made the fast for euer and euer, he hath geue them a lawe which shal not be broke.
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:
5The dayes of man are shorte, ye nombre of his monethes are knowne only vnto the. Thou hast apoynted him his boundes, he can not go beyonde them.
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.
11Shuldest thou the se no darcknesse? Shulde not the water floude runne ouer the?
9They stretch forth their mouth vnto the heauen, & their tonge goeth thorow the worlde.
11Out of droppes bryngeth he greate floudes together, & the thinge that is hyd bryngeth he to light.
9His length exceadeth the length of the earth, and his bredth ye bredth of the see.
34Morouer, cast thou lift vp thy voyce to ye cloudes, yt they maye poure downe a greate rayne vpo the?
8They that dwell in ye vttemost partes are afrayed at thy tokens, thou makest both the mornynge and euenynge starres to prayse ye.
9Thou visetest the earth, thou watrest it, and makest it very plenteous.
4Their soude is gone out in to all londes, and their wordes in to the endes of the worlde.
9O LORDE God of hoostes, who is like vnto the in power? thy trueth is rounde aboute the.
14Thou makest men as the fish in the see, and like as the crepinge beestes, that haue no gyde.
7He commaundeth the Sone, & it ryseth not: he closeth vp the starres, as it were vnder a signet.
8He himself alone spredeth out ye heauens, and goeth vpon the wawes of the see.
16Camest thou euer into the groude of the see, Or, hast thou walked in ye lowe corners of ye depe?
8The foules of the ayre: the fysh of the see, and what so walketh thorow the wayes of the see.
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,
4wt the ryuer of water parteth he a sunder the straunge people, yt knoweth no good neghbourheade: soch as are rude, vnmanerly & boysteous.
10Thou blewest with thy wynde, the see couered them, and they sancke downe as leed in the mightie waters.
2and the fountaynes of the depe and the wyndowes of heauen were stopte, and the rayne of heaue was forbydden,
9There putteth he his honde vpon the stony rockes, & ouerthroweth the mountaynes.
22Feare ye not me, saieth the LORDE? Are ye not ashamed, to loke me in the face? which bynde the see with the sonde, so that it can not passe his boundes: For though it rage, yet can it do nothinge: and though the wawes therof do swell, yet maye they not go ouer.
18Namely, how thou hast set the in a slippery place, that thou maiest cast the downe headlynges & destroye the.
8Which turned the harde rocke in to a stondinge water, & the flynt stone in to a sprynginge well.
19the waters pearse thorow the very stones by litle and litle, the floudes wa?she awaye the grauell & earth: Euen so destroyest thou the hope of man in like maner.
19Yee the waters preuayled and increased so sore vpon earth, that all the hye mountaynes vnder the whole heauen were couered.
33Which turneth the floudes in to drie londe, and drieth vp the water sprynges.