Job 15:3

Bishops' Bible (1568)

Shall he reproue with a worde that is nothing worth, & speake the thinges which can do no good?

Additional Resources

Referenced Verses

  • Job 13:4-5 : 4 As for you, ye are workmaisters of lyes, and vnprofitable phisitians altogether. 5 Woulde God ye kept your tongue, for then might ye be taken for wise men.
  • Job 16:2-3 : 2 I haue oft times heard such thinges: miserable geuers of comfort are ye all the sort of you. 3 Shall not vaine wordes come yet to an ende? Or what maketh thee bolde so to aunswere?
  • Job 26:1-3 : 1 Iob aunswered, and sayde: 2 Who hast thou helped? Him that is without strength? sauest thou the arme that hath no strength? 3 Where is the counsayle that thou shouldest geue him which hath no wisdome? Hast thou shewed the way of right lyuing?
  • Mal 3:13-15 : 13 Your wordes haue ben stout against me saith the lorde: and you saide, Wherein haue we spoken against thee? 14 Ye haue saide: it is but vayne to serue God, and what profite is it that we haue kept his commaundement, & that we haue walked humbly before the face of the Lorde of hoastes? 15 And nowe we call the proude happie: yea the workers of wickednesse are set vp, and also they that tempt God, yea they are deliuered.
  • Matt 12:36-37 : 36 But I say vnto you, of euery idell worde that men shall speake, they shall geue accompt therof, in the day of iudgment. 37 For of thy wordes, thou shalt be iustified: and of thy wordes, thou shalt be condemned.
  • Col 4:6 : 6 Let your speache be alway in grace, powdered with salt, to knowe howe ye ought to aunswere euery man.
  • 1 Tim 6:4-5 : 4 He is puft vp, knowyng nothing, but dotyng about questions and strifes of wordes, wherof commeth enuie, stryfe, raylynges, euyll surmysynges, 5 Uayne disputations of men of corrupte myndes, destitute of the trueth, thynkyng lucre to be godlynesse. From suche be thou separate.

Similar Verses (AI)

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

  • 2Shall a wyse mans aunswere be as the winde, and fill a mans belly as it were with the winde of the east?

  • 3Shall not vaine wordes come yet to an ende? Or what maketh thee bolde so to aunswere?

  • Job 6:25-26
    2 verses
    75%

    25How strong are the wordes of trueth? and which of you can rebuke or reproue them?

    26Do ye imagine to reproue wordes, that the talke of the afflicted shoulde be as the winde?

  • Job 11:2-3
    2 verses
    75%

    2Shoulde not he that maketh many wordes be aunswered? Shoulde he that bableth much be commended therin?

    3Shoulde thy lies make men holde their peace, and when thou mockest others shall no man make thee ashamed?

  • Job 26:3-4
    2 verses
    74%

    3Where is the counsayle that thou shouldest geue him which hath no wisdome? Hast thou shewed the way of right lyuing?

    4To whom hast thou spoken these wordes? who made the breath to come out of thy mouth?

  • 9For he hath sayde, It profiteth a man nothing that he shoulde walke with God.

  • 16Therefore doth Iob open his mouth but in vaine, & he maketh many wordes without knowledge.

  • 15Who is the almightie that we should serue him? And what profite should we haue if we should pray vnto him?

  • Job 13:5-7
    3 verses
    73%

    5Woulde God ye kept your tongue, for then might ye be taken for wise men.

    6Now heare my reasoning, and ponder the argument of my lippes.

    7Wyll you speake wickedlie for gods defence and talke deceitfully for his cause?

  • 13That thy minde is so pufte vp against God, and lettest such wordes go out of thy mouth?

  • Job 22:2-4
    3 verses
    72%

    2May a man be profitable vnto God, as he that is wise may be profitable vnto him selfe?

    3Is it any aduauntage to the almightie that thou art righteous? or shall it profite him that thou makest thy wayes perfect?

    4Is he afrayde to reproue thee, and to step foorth with thee into iudgement?

  • 3The wordes of his mouth are vnrighteous and full of deceipt: he hath left of to behaue him selfe wisely & to do good.

  • 35Iob hath not spoken of knowledge, neither were his wordes according to wysdome.

  • 23In euery labour there is some profite: but vayne wordes bryng foorth onely penurie.

  • 14He hath not spoken vnto me, and I wil not aunswere hym as ye haue done.

  • 13And why doest thou then striue against him? for he shall not geue the accomptes of all his wordes.

  • 9What hath a man els that doth any thyng, but weerinesse and labour?

  • 14Howe much lesse shall I aunswere him? or howe shoulde I finde out my wordes with him?

  • 2What is he that darkeneth his counsaile by wordes without knowledge?

  • 20Shall it be tolde him what I saye? Shall man speake when he shalbe destroyed?

  • 4Surely thou hast cast of feare, and restrainest prayer before God.

  • 13The beginning of his talking is foolishnesse: & the last worde of his mouth is starke madnesse.

  • 3Neuerthelesse, I talke with the almightie, and my desire is to commune with God.

  • 2If we assay to come with thee, wilt thou be discontent? But who can withhold him selfe from speaking?

  • 2Shall he whom the almightie wyl chasten, contend with him? Should not he which disputeth with God, geue him an aunswere?

  • 30Striue not with any man without a cause, where as he hath done thee no harme.

  • 9Tell nothing into the eares of a foole: for he wyll despise the wysdome of thy wordes.

  • 3For thou sayest: what aduauntage wyll it be vnto thee, and what profite shall I haue of my sinne?

  • 30He shall neuer depart out of darkenesse, the flame shal drye vp his branches, with the blast of ye mouth of God shall he be taken away.

  • 16Whereto hath a foole treasure in his hande to bye wisdome, seeing he hath no minde therto?

  • 9But foolishe questions, and genealogies, and contentions, and striuinges about the lawe, auoyde: for they are vnprofitable and vayne.

  • 14Lyke as the kinges and lordes of the earth, which haue buylded them selues speciall places,

  • 2When wyll ye make an ende of your wordes? Marke well, and then we wyll speake.

  • 3If he wil argue with hym, he can not aunswere hym one thing of a thousande.

  • 3Doest thou open thyne eyes vpon such one, and bringest me into thy iudgement?

  • 5But make the foole an aunswere to his foolishnesse, lest he be wyse in his owne conceipt.

  • 3For what els hath a man of all the labour that he taketh vnder the sunne?

  • 9Shall that helpe you when he calleth you to reckening? For as one man mocketh an other, so do ye mocke him.

  • 3Wyl he make many faire wordes with thee thinkest thou or flatter thee?

  • 4He is puft vp, knowyng nothing, but dotyng about questions and strifes of wordes, wherof commeth enuie, stryfe, raylynges, euyll surmysynges,

  • 19Where much babblyng is, there must needes be offence: and he that refrayneth his lippes, is wyse.

  • 3Thinkest thou it welldone to oppresse me? to cast me of beyng the workes of thy handes? and to mayntayne the counsell of the vngodly?

  • 4Is it for mans sake that I make this disputation? Which if it were so, shoulde not my spirite then be in sore trouble?