Job Chapter 31 – Catholic Bible

The Book of Job

Chapter 31

1 – I made a covenant with my eyes, that I would not so much as think upon a virgin.

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2 – For what part should God from above have in me, and what inheritance the Almighty from on high?

3 – Is not destruction to the wicked, and aversion to them that work iniquity?

4 – Doth not he consider my ways, and number all my steps?

5 – If I have walked in vanity, and my foot hath made haste to deceit:

6 – Let him weigh me in a just balance, and let God know my simplicity.

7 – If my step hath turned out of the way, and if my heart hath followed my eyes, and if a spot hath cleaved to my hands:

8 – Then let me sow and let another eat: and let my offspring be rooted out.

9 – If my heart hath been deceived upon a woman, and if I have laid wait at my friend’s door:

10 – Let my wife be the harlot of another, and let other men lie with her.

11 – For this is a heinous crime, and a most grievous iniquity.

12 – It is a fire that devoureth even to destruction, and rooteth up all things that spring.

13 – If I have despised to abide judgment with my manservant, or my maidservant, when they had any controversy against me:

14 – For what shall I do when God shall rise to judge? and when he shall examine, what shall I answer him?

15 – Did not he that made me in the womb make him also: and did not one and the same form me in the womb?

16 – If I have denied to the poor what they desired, and have made the eyes of the widow wait:

17 – If I have eaten my morsel alone, and the fatherless hath not eaten thereof:

18 – (For from my infancy mercy grew up with me: and it came out with me from my mother’s womb 🙂

19 – If I have despised him that was perishing for want of clothing, and the poor man that had no covering:

20 – If his sides have not blessed me, and if he were not warmed with the fleece of my sheep:

21 – If I have lifted up my hand against the fatherless, even when I saw myself superior in the gate:

22 – Let my shoulder fall from its joint, and let my arm with its bones be broken.

23 – For I have always feared God as waves swelling over me, and his weight I was not able to bear.

24 – If I have thought gold my strength, and have said to fine gold: My confidence:

25 – If I have rejoiced over my great riches, and because my hand had gotten much.

26 – If I beheld the sun when it shined, and the moon going in brightness:

27 – And my heart in secret hath rejoiced, and I have kissed my hand with my mouth:

28 – Which is a very great iniquity, and a denial against the most high God.

29 – If I have been glad at the downfall of him that hated me, and have rejoiced that evil had found him.

30 – For I have not given my mouth to sin, by wishing a curse to his soul.

31 – If the men of my tabernacle have not said: Who will give us of his flesh that we may be filled?

32 – The stranger did not stay without, my door was open to the traveller.

33 – If as a man I have hid my sin, and have concealed my iniquity in my bosom.

34 – If I have been afraid at a very great multitude, and the contempt of kinsmen hath terrified me: and I have not rather held my peace, and not gone out of the door.

35 – Who would grant me a hearer, that the Almighty may hear my desire; and that he himself that judgeth would write a book,

36 – That I may carry it on my shoulder, and put it about me as a crown?

37 – At every step of mine I would pronounce it, and offer it as to a prince.

38 – If my land cry against me, and with it the furrows thereof mourn:

39 – If I have eaten the fruits thereof without money, and have afflicted the soul of the tillers thereof:

40 – Let thistles grow up to me instead of wheat, and thorns instead of barley.

The Catholic Bible Online. Scriptures are from The Douay Rheims Catholic Bible 1582-1610 a.d. Version In the Public Domain. The Douay Rheims Bible is a translation of the Bible from the Latin Vulgate into English undertaken by members of the English College, Douai in the service of the Catholic Church.