Ah, misunderstood. Now then thinking you might understand the answer. There's something unique about the language of both, something which makes the two very much alike, but still completely different than anything else. Don't really know what that is; a certain something I don't know what. That's why they have the same voice. Have before said, if not knowing for certain which was written first, would wonder who copied whose writing style. Both also share a quality which allows the reader to pluck a single sentence or phrase completely out of context, and it have so much meaning on its own, applicable to so many different moments and circumstance. Can't imagine there's much in life which both Shakespeare and the Bible aren't applicable.