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XVI. Then Judith began to sing this thanksgiving in all Israel, and all the people sang after her * this song of praise. 2 And Judith said,

Begin unto my God with atimbrels,

Sing unto my Lord with bcymbals:

Tune unto him a * new psalm:

Exalt him, and call upon his name.

3  For God cbreaketh the battles:

For amongst the camps in the midst of the people

He hath delivered me out of the hands of them that persecuted me.

4  Assur came out of the mountains dfrom the north,

He came with ten thousands of his army,

The multitude whereof stopped the torrents,

And etheir horsemen have covered the hills.

5  fHe bragged that he would burn up my borders,

And kill my young men with the sword,

And gdash the sucking children against the ground,

And make mine infants has a prey,

And my virgins as a spoil.

6  But the iAlmighty Lord hath disappointed them kby the hand of a woman.

7  For the mighty one did not fall by the young men,

Neither did the sons of the lTitans smite him,

Nor high mgiants set upon him:

But nJudith the daughter of Merari weakened him with the beauty of her countenance.

8  For she put off othe garment of her widowhood

For the exaltation of those that were oppressed in Israel,

And oanointed her face with ointment,

And obound her hair in a * tire,

And took a linen garment to deceive him.

9  pHer sandals ravished his eyes,

Her beauty took his mind prisoner,

And the qfauchin passed through his neck.

10  The rPersians quaked at her boldness,

And the sMedes were * tdaunted at her hardiness.

11  Then my afflicted shouted for joy,

And my weak ones cried aloud; but * they were astonished;

These lifted up their voices, but they were overthrown.

12  The sons of the damsels have pierced them through,

And wounded them as fugitives’ children:

They perished by the ubattle of the Lord.

13  I will sing unto the Lord * a new song:

wO Lord, thou art great and glorious,

Wonderful in strength, and invincible.

14  Let all creatures serve thee:

xFor thou spakest, and they were made,

yThou didst send forth thy spirit, and it created them,

And there is none that can resist thy voice.

15  For zthe mountains shall be moved from their foundations with the waters,

The rocks ashall melt as wax at thy presence:

Yet thou art merciful to them that fear thee.

16  For all sacrifice is too little for ba sweet savour unto thee,

And all the fat is not sufficient for thy burnt offering:

But he that feareth the Lord is great at all times.

17  Woe to the nations that rise up against my kindred!

The Lord iAlmighty will take vengeance of them cin the day of judgment,

In putting fire and dworms in their flesh;

And they shall feel them, and weep for ever.

18 Now as soon as they entered into Jerusalem, they worshipped the Lord; and as soon as the people were purified, they offered their burnt offerings, and their free offerings, and their gifts. 19 Judith also dedicated all the estuff of Olofernes, which the people had given her, and gave the fcanopy, which she had taken out of his bedchamber, for a ggift unto the Lord. 20 So the people continued feasting in Jerusalem hbefore the sanctuary for the space of three months, and Judith remained with them. 21 After this time every one returned to his own inheritance, and Judith went to Bethulia, and remained in her own possession, and was in her time honourable in all the country. 22 And many desired her, but none knew her all the days of her life, after that iManasses her husband was dead, and kwas gathered to his people. 23 But she increased more and more in honour, and waxed old in her husband’s house, being lan hundred and five years old, and made mher maid free; so she died in Bethulia: and they buried her in the * ncave of her husband Manasses. 24 And the house of Israel lamented her oseven days: and before she died, she did distribute her goods to all them that were nearest of kindred to Manasses her husband, and to them that were the nearest of her kindred. 25 And there was none that made the children of Israel any more afraid in the days of Judith, nor a long time after her death.

AV 1873

About The Cambridge Paragraph Bible of the Authorized English Version

The Cambridge Paragraph Bible, edited by F.H.A. Scrivener, is a comprehensive and carefully edited revision of the King James Version text. Originally published in 1873, this version presents the text in paragraph form, poetry formatted in poetic line-division, and also includes the Apocrypha. Scrivener’s revisions are thoroughly documented, including multiple appendices which include translation notes and instances of departure from the original KJV text.

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