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Job 38:23 - Christian Standard Bible Anglicised

23 which I hold in reserve for times of trouble, for the day of warfare and battle?

Féach an chaibidil Cóip


Tuilleadh leaganacha

King James Version (Oxford) 1769

23 Which I have reserved against the time of trouble, Against the day of battle and war?

Féach an chaibidil Cóip

Amplified Bible - Classic Edition

23 Which I have reserved for the time of trouble, for the day of battle and war? [Exod. 9:18; Josh. 10:11; Isa. 30:30; Rev. 16:21.]

Féach an chaibidil Cóip

American Standard Version (1901)

23 Which I have reserved against the time of trouble, Against the day of battle and war?

Féach an chaibidil Cóip

Common English Bible

23 that I have reserved for a time of distress, for a day of battle and war?

Féach an chaibidil Cóip

Catholic Public Domain Version

23 which I have prepared for the time of the enemy, for the day of the battle and the war?

Féach an chaibidil Cóip




Job 38:23
11 Tagairtí Cros  

Those who have a godless heart harbour anger; even when God binds them, they do not cry for help.


For he judges the nations with these; he gives food in abundance.


Have you entered the place where the snow is stored? Or have you seen the storehouses of hail,


What road leads to the place where light is dispersed? Where is the source of the east wind that spreads across the earth?


Tomorrow at this time I will rain down the worst hail  that has ever occurred in Egypt from the day it was founded until now.


The hail, with lightning flashing through it, was so severe that nothing like it had occurred in the land of Egypt since it had become a nation.


And the Lord will make the splendour of his voice heard and reveal his arm   striking in angry wrath and a flame of consuming fire, in driving rain, a torrent, and hailstones.


The rain fell, the rivers rose, the winds blew and pounded that house, and it collapsed. It collapsed with a great crash.’


As they fled before Israel, the Lord threw large hailstones on them  from the sky along the descent of Beth-horon all the way to Azekah, and they died. More of them died from the hail than the Israelites killed with the sword.


Enormous hailstones, each weighing about fifty kilograms,  fell from the sky on people, and they blasphemed God  for the plague of hail because that plague was extremely severe.


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