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Exodus 34:21 - Tree of Life Version

21 “For six days you will work, but on the seventh day you will rest. During plowing time and harvest you must rest.

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Tuilleadh leaganacha

King James Version (Oxford) 1769

21 Six days thou shalt work, but on the seventh day thou shalt rest: in earing time and in harvest thou shalt rest.

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Amplified Bible - Classic Edition

21 Six days you shall work, but on the seventh day you shall rest; even in plowing time and in harvest you shall rest [on the Sabbath].

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American Standard Version (1901)

21 Six days thou shalt work, but on the seventh day thou shalt rest: in plowing time and in harvest thou shalt rest.

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Common English Bible

21 You should do your work for six days, but on the seventh day you should rest. Even during plowing or harvesttime you should rest.

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Catholic Public Domain Version

21 For six days you shall work. On the seventh day you shall cease to cultivate and to harvest.

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Exodus 34:21
13 Tagairtí Cros  

For there has been two years of famine in the land, and there will be five more years yet with no plowing or harvesting.


In those days, I saw in Judah some people treading winepresses on the Shabbat, some bringing and loading heaps of grain on donkeys, as well as wine, grapes, figs and various other burdens, bringing them into Jerusalem on the Shabbat day. So I warned them about selling food on that day.


“You are to do your work for six days, but on the seventh day you will rest, so that your ox and your donkey may have rest, and also the son of your handmaid and the outsider may be refreshed.


Work is to be done for six days, but on the seventh day is a Shabbat of complete rest, holy to Adonai. Whoever does any work on the Shabbat will surely be put to death.


Work is to be done for six days, but the seventh day is a holy day for you, a Shabbat of complete rest to Adonai. Whoever does any work then will die.


The oxen and the young donkeys that till the ground will eat seasoned fodder, which has been winnowed with shovel and pitchfork.


“Work may be done for six days, but the seventh day is a Shabbat of solemn rest, a holy convocation. You are to do no work—it is a Shabbat to Adonai in all your dwellings.


But the synagogue leader, indignant that Yeshua had healed on Shabbat, started telling the crowd, “There are six days in which work should be done—so come to be healed on those days and not on Yom Shabbat!”


Then they returned and prepared spices and perfumes. But on Shabbat they rested according to the commandment.


Then the elders of that city are to bring the heifer down to a flowing wadi that has not been plowed or sown, and break the heifer’s neck there in the wadi.


He will appoint them as commanders of thousands and captains of fifties, also some to plow his fields, reap his harvest, make his weapons of war and the equipment for his chariots.


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