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Psalm 69:8 - Holy Bible: Easy-to-Read Version

8 My own brothers treat me like a stranger. They act as if I came from a foreign land.

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Tuilleadh leaganacha

King James Version (Oxford) 1769

8 I am become a stranger unto my brethren, And an alien unto my mother's children.

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Amplified Bible - Classic Edition

8 I have become a stranger to my brethren, and an alien to my mother's children. [John 7:3-5.]

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American Standard Version (1901)

8 I am become a stranger unto my brethren, And an alien unto my mother’s children.

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Common English Bible

8 I have become a stranger to my own brothers, an immigrant to my mother’s children.

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Psalm 69:8
18 Tagairtí Cros  

My enemies despise me, and even my neighbors have turned away. When my friends see me in the street, they turn the other way. They are afraid to be around me.


Because of my sickness, my friends and neighbors will not visit me; my family will not come near me.


Praise the Lord forever! Amen and Amen!


I will let those people beat me and pull the hair from my beard. I will not hide my face when they say bad things to me and spit at me.


People made fun of him, and even his friends left him. He was a man who suffered a lot of pain and sickness. We treated him like someone of no importance, like someone people will not even look at but turn away from in disgust.


The fact is, it was our suffering he took on himself; he bore our pain. But we thought that God was punishing him, that God was beating him for something he did.


Lord, you understand me. Remember me and take care of me. People are hurting me. Give them the punishment they deserve. You are being patient with them. But don’t destroy me while you remain patient with them. Think about me. Think about the pain I suffer for you.


But all these things have happened to show the full meaning of what the prophets wrote.” Then all of Jesus’ followers left him and ran away.


He came to the world that was his own. And his own people did not accept him.


Jesus’ brothers said this because even they did not believe in him.


David’s oldest brother Eliab heard David talking with the soldiers and became angry. Eliab asked David, “Why did you come here? Who did you leave those few sheep with in the desert? I know why you came down here. You didn’t want to do what you were told to do. You just wanted to come down here to watch the battle.”


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