Job 37:16
Art thou of his coucell, when he spredeth out the cloudes? Hast thou the perfecte knowlege of his wonders?
Art thou of his coucell, when he spredeth out the cloudes? Hast thou the perfecte knowlege of his wonders?
These verses are found using AI-powered semantic similarity based on meaning and context. Results may occasionally include unexpected connections.
14Herken vnto this (o Iob) stonde still, and considre the wonderous workes of God.
15Art thou of coucel with God, when he doth these thinges? When he causeth the light to come forth of his cloudes?
33Knowest thou the course off heaue, yt thou mayest set vp the ordinaunce therof vpo earth?
34Morouer, cast thou lift vp thy voyce to ye cloudes, yt they maye poure downe a greate rayne vpo the?
37who nombreth the cloudes in wisdome? who stilleth ye vehement waters of the heaue?
29He can sprede out the cloudes (a couerynge off his tabernacle)
12Now because yt God is hyer the the heauens, & because thou seist yt the starres are so hye,
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.
17and how thy clothes are warme, whe the lode is still thorow the south wynde?
18hast thou helped him to spred out the heauen, which is to loke vpo, as it were cast of cleare metall?
18Hast thou also perceaued, how brode ye earth is? Now yf thou hast knowlege of all,
19the shewe me where light dwelleth, and where darcknes is:
20yt thou mayest bringe vs vnto their quarters, yf thou cast tell the waye to their houses.
21Knewest thou (when thou wast borne) how olde thou shuldest be?
22Wentest thou euer in to the treasuries off the snowe, or hast thou sene ye secrete places of the hale:
27He turneth ye water to smaldroppes, he dryueth his cloudes
20Thorow his wi?dome ye depthes breake vp, & ye cloudes droppe downe the dew.
11The cloudes do their laboure in geuynge moystnesse, the cloudes poure downe their rayne.
7Wilt thou fynde out God with thy sekynge? wilt thou attayne to the perfectnesse of the Allmightie?
8He is hyer the heaue, what wilt thou do? Deper the hell, how wilt thou then knowe him?
25When he weyed the wyndes, & measured ye waters:
26when he set the rayne in ordre, and gaue the mightie floudes a lawe:
8He byndeth ye water in his cloudes, that they fall not downe together.
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
2what is he, that hydeth his mynde with foolysh wordes?
3Thou voltest it aboue with waters, thou makest the cloudes thy charet, and goest vpon the wynges of the wynde.
4Who hath clymmed vp i to heauen? Who hath come downe from thence? Who hath holden ye wynde fast in his hade? Who hath coprehended ye waters in a garment? Who hath set all the endes of ye worlde? What is his name, or his sonnes name? Canst thou tell?
14This is now a shorte summe of his doynges. But who is able sufficiently to rehearce his workes? Who can perceaue and vnderstonde ye thondre of his power?
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,
5loke vnto the heaue, & beholde it: cosidre ye cloudes, how they are hyer then thou.
3For who can kepe his owne councell so secrete, but it shall be knowne? Therfore haue I spoken vnwysely, seynge these thinges are so hye, and passe myne vnderstondinge.
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
32In ye turnynge of a hande he hydeth the light, & at his commaundement it commeth agayne.
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.
7He bryngeth forth the cloudes from the endes of the worlde, he turneth ye lighteniges vnto rayne, bringige the wyndes out of their treasuries.
4Where wast thou, when I layed ye foundacions of the earth? Tell planely yff thou hast vnderstondinge.
4Knowest thou not this, namely: that from the begynninge (euer sence the creacion of man vpon earth)
12Who hath holden the waters in his fist? Who hath measured heauen with his spanne, and hath comprehended all the earth of ye worlde in thre fyngers? Who hath weyed the mountaynes and hilles?
9What is he, but he knoweth, that ye hode of the LORDE made all these?
9Is thine arme then like the arme of God? Maketh thy voyce soch a soude as his doth?
4True are my wordes, & no lye: and the knowlege wherwithall I argue agaynst the, is perfecte.
3Thinkest thou it now well done, to open thine eyes vpon soch one, and to brynge me before the in iudgment?
9When I made the cloudes to be a coueringe for it, and swedled it with ye darcke?
10He doth greate thinges, soch as are vnsearcheable, yee and wonders without nombre.
8hast thou herde the secrete councell of God, that all wy?dome is to litle for ye?
9What knowest thou, yt we knowe not? What vnderstondest thou, but we can the same?