I do not think you will find that quote in the Bible. None of the major versions of the Bible include the words "perplexed people" (King James Version, New International Version, New American Standard Bible).
It depends on which version of the Bible you are reading. I don't know of any such verse in the King James version, but other translations have taken liberties with the text and may say something like that. Others have taken verses out of context and blended them together for their sermons, so you could have heard a "quote" from the Bible that is not entirely accurate.
The quote 'Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned' does not originate from the Bible. The mistake is due to the fact that the King James Version completed in 1611 uses similar-sounding English, and the quote is in a similar format to verses found in the Book of Proverbs. The quote is an idiom that is adapted from a line in William Congreve's play, The Mourning Bride (1697)
== == No one version seems to match this quote exactly. The Darby version is reasonably close: Not every one who says to me, Lord, Lord, shall enter into the kingdom of the heavens, but he that does the will of my Father who is in the heavens
we should give tenth part to the god
I do not think you will find that quote in the Bible. None of the major versions of the Bible include the words "perplexed people" (King James Version, New International Version, New American Standard Bible).
What quote? You make the quote, and we shall tell you where it is in the Bible,
This is not a Bible quote.
Ruth said this to Naomi in the bible (Ruth 1:16). The king James version says it best, in my opinion (closest version to the quote you've posted here).
If you want to quote from a certain version of the Bible you can do a few sentences or verses. If you quote a lot of it then you must contact the publisher of that Bible. See the front of the Bible for where to locate the company. They are on the web too. If you wish to quote an author you need to contact that author's publisher for permission. If you wish to quote a speaker you need to contact the speaker directly through a letter or an email. Look for a website for that speaker. Always get the permission in writing. Record their permission in your book and put the written document in a special file folder.
Nowhere; that is not a quote from the Bible.
No.
It is a quote from the author Joseph Cambell.
nowhere, that quote isn't from the bible
One Stalin quote was "I don't trust anyone, not even myself".
It depends on which version of the Bible you are reading. I don't know of any such verse in the King James version, but other translations have taken liberties with the text and may say something like that. Others have taken verses out of context and blended them together for their sermons, so you could have heard a "quote" from the Bible that is not entirely accurate.
Penis