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JOB C1 C2 C3 C4 C5 C6 C7 C8 C9 C10 C11 C12 C13 C14 C15 C16 C17 C18 C19 C20 C21 C22 C23 C24 C25 C26 C27 C28 C29 C30 C31 C32 C33 C34 C35 C36 C37 C38 C39 C40 C41 C42
5c Setting bounds tha they may not pass;
28 While man doth waste with decay,
Like a garment devoured of the moth.
14 Man that is born of a woman
Is of few days and filled with trouble.
2 He comes forth like a flower and he withers;
He flees like a shadow and stays not.
3 On such dost Thou open Thine eyes?
And him wouldst Thou bring to Thy judgment?
4 Who can bring from the unclean the clean?
Not one is free from sin.
5a Seeing, then, that his days are decreed,
5b And the tale of his months is with Thee,
6 Look away, and let him have peace,
To enjoy like a hireling his day.
7 For hope there may be for a tree:
Though cut down, it may sprout once again,
And the shoots there from need to fail.
8 Though its root in the earth wax old,
And its stem be dead in the ground,
9 It may bud at the scent of water,
And put forth boughs like a plant.
10 But the strong man dies and lies prostrate;
Man breathes his last and where is he?
11 Like the floods of a vanished sea,
Like a river dry and withered–
12b Till the heavens be no more, he awakes not,
12c Nor ever is roused from his sleep.
13 O wouldst Thou but hide me in Sheol
Out of sight, till Thine anger be past,
And then call me to mind in Thine own set time!
14 If a dead man may live once again,
I could wait all the days of my warfare
Until my release shoud come.
15 Thou shouldst call, and I would answer:
Thou wouldst year for the work of Thy hands.
16 But now Thou countest my steps,
And passest not over my sin.
17 My transgressions is sealed in a bag;
Thou hast fastened secure mine iniquity.
18 But the very hills crumble to pieces,
The rocks are moved out of their place;
19 Water wears stone to dust,
The floods wash the soil away:
So the hope of man Thou destroyest;
12a He lieth, to rise up no more.
20 Thou dost worst him for ever; he passeth,
Dismissed – with his face how changed!
21 Honour comes to his sons, but he knows not:
Or shame, but he doth not perceive it.
22 But the flesh upon him feels pain,
And the soul within him is sorrowful.
ACT II
Eliphaz’s Appeal to the Unadulterated Doctrine of the Past
JOB C1 C2 C3 C4 C5 C6 C7 C8 C9 C10 C11 C12 C13 C14 C15 C16 C17 C18 C19 C20 C21 C22 C23 C24 C25 C26 C27 C28 C29 C30 C31 C32 C33 C34 C35 C36 C37 C38 C39 C40 C41 C42