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The Septuagint in English by Brenton
LXX(EN)
The Epistle of Barnabas
EpiBar
[1]But Job answered and said, [No book]
[2]Oh that one would indeed weigh the wrath that is upon me, and take up my griefs in a balance together! [No book]
[3]And verily they would be heavier than the sand by the seashore: but, as it seems, my words are vain. [No book]
[4]For the arrows of the Lord are in my body, whose violence drinks up my blood: whenever I am going to speak, they pierce me. [No book]
[5]What then? will the wild ass bray for nothing, if he is not seeking food? or again, will the ox low at the manger, when he has a fodder? [No book]
[6]Shall bread be eaten without salt? or again, is there taste in empty words? [No book]
[7]For my wrath cannot cease; for I perceive my food as the smell of a lion to be loathsome. [No book]
[8]For oh that he would grant my desire, and my petition might come, and the Lord would grant my hope! [No book]
[9]Let the Lord begin and wound me, but let him not utterly destroy me. [No book]
[10]Let the grave be my city, upon the walls of which I have leaped: I will not shrink from it; for I have not denied the holy words of my God. [No book]
[11]For what is my strength, that I continue? what is my time, that my soul endures? [No book]
[12]Is my strength the strength of stones? or is my flesh of brass? [No book]
[13]Or have I not trusted in him? but help is far from me. [No book]
[14]Mercy has rejected me; and the visitation of the Lord has disregarded me. [No book]
[15]My nearest relations have not regarded me; they have passed me by like a failing brook, or like a wave. [No book]
[16]They who used to reverence me, now have come against me like snow or congealed ice. [No book]
[17]When it has melted at the approach of heat, it is not known what it was. [No book]
[18]Thus I also have been deserted of all; and I am ruined, and become an outcast. [No book]
[19]Behold the ways of the Thaemanites, ye that mark the paths of the Sabaeans. [No book]
[20]They too that trust in cities and riches shall come to shame. [No book]
[21]But ye also have come to me without pity; so that beholding my wound ye are afraid. [No book]
[22]What? have I made any demand of you? or do I ask for strength from you, [No book]
[23]to deliver me from enemies, or to rescue me from the hand of the mighty ones? [No book]
[24]Teach ye me, and I will be silent: if in anything I have erred, tell me. [No book]
[25]But as it seems, the words of a true man are vain, because I do not ask strength of you. [No book]
[26]Neither will your reproof cause me to cease my words, for neither will I endure the sound of your speech. [No book]
[27]Even because ye attack the fatherless, and insult your friend. [No book]
[28]But now, having looked upon your countenances, I will not lie. [No book]
[29]Sit down now, and let there not be unrighteousness; and unite again with the just. [No book]
[30]For there is no injustice in my tongue; and does not my throat meditate understanding? [No book]
Author: Sir Lancelot Charles Lee Brenton (1851)
Source: ecmarsh.com
Translation: Charles H. Hoole (1885)
Source: www.earlychristianwritings.com
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