Psalms 107:23
They that go downe to the see in shippes, & occupie their busynesse in greate waters.
They that go downe to the see in shippes, & occupie their busynesse in greate waters.
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24These men se the workes of the LORDE, & his wonders in the depe.
25For at his worde, the stormy wynde aryseth, and lifteth vp the wawes therof.
26They are caried vp to the heauen, & downe agayne to the depe, their soule melteth awaye in the trouble.
27They rele to and fro, they stacker like a droncken man, and are at their wittes ende.
28So they crie vnto the LORDE in their trouble, & he delyuereth the out of their distresse.
29He maketh the storme to ceasse, so that the wawes are still.
30The are they glad because they be at rest, & so he bryngeth them vnto the hauen where they wolde be.
31O that men wolde prayse the goodnes of the LORDE, and the wonders that he doth for the children of men.
25So is this greate and wyde see also, wherin are thinges crepinge innumerable, both small and greate beastes.
26There go the shippes ouer, and there is that Leuiathan, whom thou hast made, to take his pastyme therin.
27They wayte all vpo the, that thou mayest geue them meate in due season.
21O that men wolde prayse the goodnesse of the LORDE, & the wonders that he doth for the children of men.
22That they wolde offre vnto him the sacrifice of thankesgeuynge, and tell out his workes with gladnes.
29All whirry men, and all maryners vpo the see, shall leape out of their boates, and set them selues vpon the lode.
25The shippes of Tharsis were the chefe off thy occupienge. Thus thou art full, and in greate worshipe, euen in the myddest off the see.
26Thy maryners were euer brynginge vnto the out of many waters. But ye easte wynde shal ouerbeare the in to the myddest off the see:
27so yt thy wares, thy marchaudies, thy ryches, thy maryners, thy shipmasters, thy helpers, thy occupiers (that brought the thinges necessary) the men off warre that are in the: yee and all thy comons shall perish in the myddest off the see, in the daye off thy fall.
11and sayde morouer vnto him: What shall we do vnto the, that the see maye ceasse from troublinge vs? (for the see wrought and was troublous)
12he answered them: Take me, and cast me in to the see, so shal it let you be in rest: for I wote, it is for my sake, that this greate tempest is come vpon you.
13Neuerthelesse, the men assayed with rowinge, to brynge the shippe to lode: but it wolde not be, because the see wrought so, & was so troublous agaynst them.
27And Hiram sent his seruauntes by shippe, which were shipmen, and had experience of the See, with Salomons seruauntes,
33When thy wares & marchaundies came fro the sees thou gauest all people ynough. The kynges off the earth hast thou made rich, thorow the multitude off thy wares and occupienge:
34But now art thou cast downe in to the depe of the see, all thy resorte of people is perished with the.
14And those same (that remayne) shal lift vp their voyce, and be glad, & shal magnifie the glory of the LORDE, euen from the see,
7With trompettes also & shawmes: O shewe youre selues ioyfull before the LORDE the kynge.
4Beholde also ye shyppes, which though they be so gret, and are dryuen of fearce windes, yet are they turned about with a very smale helme, whither soeuer the violence of the gouerner wyll.
39Whan it was daye, they knewe not the londe. But they spyed an hauen with a banke, in to which they were mynded (yf it were possible) to thrust in the shippe.
40And whan they had take vp the anckers, they commytted them selues to the see, and lowsed the rudder bandes, and hoyssed vp the mayne sayle to the wynde, and drue towarde londe.
41And whan we chaunced on a place which had the see on both the sydes, the shippe dasshed vpon it. And the fore parte abode fast vnmoued, but the hynder parte brake thorow the violence of the wawes.
23And as they sayled, he slepte. And there came a storme of wynde vpon ye lake, and the wawes fell vpon the, and they stode in greate ioperdy.
4But the LORDE hurled a greate wynde in to the see, and there was a mightie tempest in the see: so that the shippe was in ioperdy of goinge in peces.
5Then the maryners were afrayde, and cried euery man vnto his god: and the goodes that were in the shippe, they cast in to the see, to lighten it off them. But Ionas gat him vnder ye hatches, where he layed him downe and slombred.
8The foules of the ayre: the fysh of the see, and what so walketh thorow the wayes of the see.
17Which they toke vp, and vsed helpe, and bounde it vnder harde to the shippe, fearinge lest they shulde haue fallen in to the Syrtes, and let downe the vessell, and so were caried.
18And whan we had bydden a greate tepest, on the nexte daye they made an outcastinge.
24And beholde, there arose a greate tempest in the see, in so moch that the shippe was couered with wawes, & he was a slepe.
7He gathereth ye waters together as it were in a bottell, & laieth vp the depe in secrete.
30Whan the shipmen were aboute to flye out of the shippe, and let downe the bote in to the see, (vnder a coloure as though they wolde cast ankers out of the fore shippe)
37And there arose a greate storme of wynde, and dasshed the wawes in to the shippe, so that the shippe was full.
16Morouer, thus saieth the LORDE (Euen he that maketh a waye in the see, and a footpath in the mightie waters:
10Thou blewest with thy wynde, the see couered them, and they sancke downe as leed in the mightie waters.
7And they made sygnes to their felowes which were in ye other shippe, yt they shulde come, & helpe the. And they came, & fylled both the shippes full, so yt they soncke.
13So they cried vnto the LORDE in their trouble, & he delyuered them out of their distresse.
15So they toke Ionas, and cast him in to the see, and the see lefte ragynge.
9The eldest and wysest at Gebal were they, that mended & stopped thy shippes. All shippes off the see with their shipme occupied their marchaundies in the.
7Thou shalt breake ye shippes of the see, thorow the east wynde.
7Which stilleth ye ragige of the see, the roaringe off his wawes, and the woodnes of the people.
17for at one houre so greate ryches is come to naught. And euery shippe gouerner, and all they that occupie shippes, and shippmen which worke in the see, stode a farre of,