Job — Chapter 10
These annotations are from the original 1609 Douay Old Testament, the first complete English Catholic Bible translation, produced by English scholars in exile at the English College of Douai. The archaic spelling is preserved.
This content was digitized from the original 1609 Douay (Old Testament) and 1582 Rheims (New Testament) print editions by OCR. The OCR process sometimes confused print page numbers with verse numbers, and may have assigned annotations to the wrong chapter. Chapter and verse labels on this page reflect the OCR output from the original print pagination and may not correspond to canonical Scripture chapter/verse numbers. For canonical reference, consult a standard Douay-Rheims edition. The annotation texts themselves are authentic 1609/1582 Douay-Rheims content.
Verse 3
Although. thou conceale thefe things in thy hart , -yet know that: ‘ thouremembreft ab.chings. 14. [f 1 haue finned and thou belt {pared.me tor an houre: why doef tnou not fufter me to be cleanetrom mine ints “quitie? ts. And if I thal be impious woe is to me :.and ir iult,] inal not lit vp my head, filled with affliction and milerie,16. Aud tor pride as- ia lio.-effe thou.wilt rake me, andreturnivg thou docit- meruclouily Lor- ment me.17.T hou reneweft thy witnefles againft me, 6 muitiplicit thy ‘i a 9. Why daait thou wrath toward me,aid paynes doe warre ypon me, I ‘ y hale ao ‘bring me.torth out of the matrice ¢ Who would God , [ had: been cou- fumed wathed as it were with {now-wacters,& - acither I wil anfwer a man. 4 (a ) HoliéIob knowing itto be vnpeiiible that God.-cas lumniaceths. anie man, ine quircth what is the canfe why his gogd- nes atfli<terch the iutt.- 5 IntharTam thy creature. thou maift: initly deftroy me-but ine 4 deed becatife Lt. am thy, <rca- ture thou wile fpareme: 1 . through thy mercy , giving). . Dte thy pracg, which af Livte welthoa wre aifo giue me. erernaL rci{t, .. --- PAGE 988 --- (¢} Repentance ‘eeffarie, but imoft cfpecielly at the hourc of death, The third con- 4 Aid, (2) Sophar might haue applied the vice of much fpeakine to himfelf & his felowes , al- lead ging ma- nic ‘things which proued not their opi- Jnion, wheras Tobs allega~ tions proued direMly that which he affir- imed. (blobs owne confcicnce affirmed the contraric.ch.é, Vv. 3. (¢} He could feffe iniquitie which he had 4net comanuit- ted, 960 4s alwayes ne- { qnociuftly con- TUE BOOK i famed, that eye might nar fee me, 39, had been as if 1 were not,caried fromthe wambe to the graue. 20. Shal not the fewnes of m ie ended fhortly ?{uffer me (c) therfore ,that] may a litle lament my forow: : 21, Before! goe, and returne not, vnto the darke land , thatis ' couered with the milt of death ; 22, A land of miferie and darkenefle, . where isthe fhadow of death, and no order , but cucrlaliing horrour inhabiceth,
Verse 5
my finne? 7. An } thow may {t kmow that 1 haue done no impious thtag ,. wicreas there is no man that can deliver out of thy hand. 3, (b) Toy hands haue made me, etramed me wholly-round-about, & doft thou fo fodainlte cait me downe headlong? 9.Remember I befeech thee that as clay thou madelt me ,& into-duft thou wilt bring me agayne.10,Hait thou not as milke: ' milked me,and curded meas checle 711. Wich skinne & flcin throu halt clothed me :.with bones anil tinowes:thou haft compacted me, 1 2. Lite i and mercic chou haft giuento me, and thy vifitatiG daath kept my {pirits
Verse 13
and thou belt {pared.me tor an houre: why doef tnou not fufter me to be cleanetrom mine ints “quitie? ts. And if I thal be impious woe is to me :.and ir iult,] inal not lit vp my head, filled with affliction and milerie,16. Aud tor pride as- ia lio.-effe thou.wilt rake me, andreturnivg thou docit- meruclouily Lor- ment me.17.T hou reneweft thy witnefles againft me, 6 muitiplicit thy ‘i a 9. Why daait thou wrath toward me,aid paynes doe warre ypon me, I ‘ y hale ao ‘bring me.torth out of the matrice ¢ Who would God , [ had: been cou- fumed wathed as it were with {now-wacters,& - acither I wil anfwer a man. 4 (a ) HoliéIob knowing itto be vnpeiiible that God.-cas lumniaceths. anie man, ine quircth what is the canfe why his gogd- nes atfli<terch the iutt.- 5 IntharTam thy creature. thou maift: initly deftroy me-but ine 4 deed becatife Lt. am thy, <rca- ture thou wile fpareme: 1 . through thy mercy , giving). . Dte thy pracg, which af Livte welthoa wre aifo giue me. erernaL rci{t, .. (¢} Repentance ‘eeffarie, but imoft cfpecielly at the hourc of death, The third con- 4 Aid, (2) Sophar might haue applied the vice of much fpeakine to himfelf & his felowes , al- lead ging ma- nic ‘things which proued not their opi- Jnion, wheras Tobs allega~ tions proued direMly that which he affir- imed. (blobs owne confcicnce affirmed the contraric.ch.é, Vv. 3. (¢} He could feffe iniquitie which he had 4net comanuit- ted, 960 4s alwayes ne- { qnociuftly con- TUE BOOK i famed, that eye might nar fee me, 39, had been as if 1 were not,caried fromthe wambe to the graue. 20. Shal not the fewnes of m ie ended fhortly ?{uffer me (c) therfore ,that] may a litle lament my forow: : 21, Before! goe, and returne not, vnto the darke land , thatis ' couered with the milt of death ; 22, A land of miferie and darkenefle, . where isthe fhadow of death, and no order , but cucrlaliing horrour inhabiceth,
Verse 20
Repentance is alwayes necessarie, but most especially at the houre of death.