| James Strahan - 1914 - 378 pages
...If the men of my tent said not, 9 Who can find one that hath not been satisfied with his flesh ? 32 The stranger did not lodge in the street ; But I opened my doors to 10the traveller ; 33 If 11like Adam I covered my transgressions, By hiding mine iniquity in my bosom... | |
| Central Conference of American Rabbis - 1914 - 418 pages
...fathers were" ( 1 Chr. zxix, 15, see Lev. xix, 34; xxv, 23). We believe in the justice of Job's plea, "The stranger did not lodge in the street, but I opened my door to the wanderer" (Job xxxi, 32). We believe in the denunciation of the prophet, hurled at them,... | |
| 1914 - 284 pages
...Almighty. If I rejoiced at the destruction of him that hated me or lifted up myself when evil found him, or suffered my mouth to sin by wishing a curse to his soul; if my land cry against me or the furrows thereof complain that I have eaten the fruits without compensation... | |
| Central Conference of American Rabbis - 1914 - 420 pages
...fathers were" ( 1 Chr. xxix, 15, see Lev. xix, 34; xxv, 23). We believe in the justice of Job's plea, "The stranger did not lodge in the street, but I opened my door to the wanderer" (Job xxxi, 32). We believe in the denunciation of the prophet, hurled at them,... | |
| Abraham Mitrie Rihbany - 1916 - 454 pages
...thirty-first chapter. Here the afflicted patriarch, in pleading his own cause before the Most High, says, "The stranger did not lodge in the street, but I opened my doors to the traveller." Syrian rules of hospitality make it improper for a householder to ask a guest who has suddenly come... | |
| Edgar Charles Sumner Gibson - 1919 - 272 pages
...the rendering has no support from antiquity; and meat might have seemed more natural than flesh in 32 The stranger did not lodge in the street ; But I opened my doors to 'the traveller ; 33 If 2like Adam I covered my transgressions, By hiding mine iniquity in my bosom ; 34 Because I... | |
| William Kelly - 1919 - 306 pages
...They have a little pleasure when their adversaries come to grief, or are troubled. " Neither have I suffered my mouth to sin by wishing a curse to his soul. If the men of my tabernacle said not, Oh, that we had of his flesh ! we cannot be satisfied. The stranger... | |
| Sir Thomas Browne - 1922 - 310 pages
...conjunctive adverb, or phrase. The construction occurs in I Chronicles xiii. 2 ; and in Job xxxi. 38, "If my land cry against me, or that the furrows likewise . thereof complain." It is found nearly thirty times in Shakespeare, as Hamlet, I. ii. i sq.: Merchant of Venice, iv. i.... | |
| Ernest PĂ©rochon - 1923 - 360 pages
...the Bible, his hands strained by the weight of it. "Read on a little farther, boy," said Mazureau. "If my land cry against me, or that the furrows likewise...I have eaten the fruits thereof without money, or have caused the owners thereof to lose their life: let thistles grow instead of wheat, and cockle instead... | |
| Paul Edward Kretzmann - 1924 - 748 pages
...might strike him, for the love of enemies was required even in the Old Testament; v. 30. neither have I who preceded Him, He will have sons, believers, citizen his palate, as an instrument of speech, he did not wish for the death of his enemy, he had not been... | |
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