Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

Summary

O that one might plead for a man with God, as a man pleadeth for his neighbour!

Bible References

Plead

Let him take his rod away from me; yea, let him make me no more afraid of him,
Nevertheless I am purposed to talk with the almighty, and my desire is to commune with God.
O that I might see him and find him: O that I might come before his seat,
O that I had one which would hear me. Lo, this is my cause: Let the almighty give me answer, and let him that is my contrary party, sue me with libel.
Moreover, God spake unto Job, and said,
The thing that hath been is named already, and known - that it is man himself: neither may he go to law with him that is mightier than he.
Woe be unto him that chideth with his maker, the potsherd with the potter. Sayeth the clay to the potter, "What makest thou?" or "Thy work serveth for nothing?"
But O man what art thou, which disputest with God? Shall the work say to the workman, "Why hast thou made me on this fashion?"
All Translations
A Conservative Version
American Bible Union New Testament
American Standard Version
Amplified
An Understandable Version
Anderson New Testament
Bible in Basic English
Common New Testament
Daniel Mace New Testament
Darby Translation
Emphatic Diaglott Bible
Godbey New Testament
Goodspeed New Testament
Holman Bible
International Standard Version
John Wesley New Testament
Julia Smith Translation
King James 2000
King James Version
Lexham Expanded Bible
Living Oracles New Testament
Modern King James verseion
Modern Spelling Tyndale-Coverdale
Moffatt New Testament
Montgomery New Testament
NET Bible
New American Standard Bible
New Heart English Bible
Noyes New Testament
Sawyer New Testament
The Emphasized Bible
Thomas Haweis New Testament
Twentieth Century New Testament
Webster
Weymouth New Testament
Williams New Testament
World English Bible
Worldwide English (NT)
Worrell New Testament
Worsley New Testament
Youngs Literal Translation