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Textus Receptus Bibles

The Great Bible 1539

 

   

73:1A Psalme of Asaph. Truly God is louing vnto Israel: euen vnto soch as are of a cleane hert?
73:2Neuerthelesse, my fete were almost gone, my treadinges had well nye slypte.
73:3And why I was greued at the wicked, I do se also the vngodly in soch prosperite.
73:4For they are in no parell of death, but are lusty and strong.
73:5They come in no misfortune like other folke, nether are they plaged like other men.
73:6And this is the cause the they be so holden with pride, and ouerwhelmed with cruelte.
73:7Their eyes swell for fatnesse, and they do euen what they lyst.
73:8They corrupte other, & speake of wicked blasphemye: theyr talkynge is agaynst the most hiest.
73:9For they stretch forth theyr mouth vnto the heauen, & theyr tonge goeth thorow the world.
73:10Therfore fall the people vnto them, and there out sucke they no small aduauntage.
73:11Tush (saye they) how shuld God perceaue it? is there knowlege in the moost hyest?
73:12Lo, these are the vngodly, these prospere in the worlde, and these haue ryches in possessyon
73:13Then haue I clensed my herte in vayne and washed my handes in innocency?
73:14All the daye long haue I bene punished, and chastened euery mornynge.
73:15Yee, and I had almost sayde euen as they: but lo, then shuld I haue condemned the generacyon of thy chyldren.
73:16Then thought I to vnderstand this, but it was to harde for me.
73:17Untill I wente into the Sanctuary of God, then vnderderstode I the ende of these men.
73:18Namely, how thou dost sett them in slyppery places, and castest them downe and destroyest them.
73:19O how sodenly do they consume, perysh, and come to a fearfull ende?
73:20Yee, euen like as a dreame when one a waketh, so shalt thou make theyr ymage to vanysh out of the cyte.
73:21Thus my hert was greued, and it wente euen thorow my reynes.
73:22So folysh was I and ignoraunt, euen as it were a beast before the.
73:23Neuerthelesse, I am all waye by the, for thou hast holden me by my right hande.
73:24Thou shalt gyde me with thy councell, and afterwarde receaue me with glory.
73:25Whom haue I in heauen but the? And there is none vpon earth, that I desyre in comparyson of the.
73:26My fleashe and my hert fayleth, but God is the strength of my hert, and my porcyon for euer.
73:27For lo, they that forsake the shall perysh: thou hast destroyed all them that commytte fornicacyon agaynst the.
73:28But it is good for me, to holde me fast by God, to put my trust in the Lorde God, and to speake of all thy workes.
The Great Bible 1539

The Great Bible 1539

The Great Bible of 1539 was the first authorized edition of the Bible in English, authorized by King Henry VIII of England to be read aloud in the church services of the Church of England. The Great Bible was prepared by Myles Coverdale, working under commission of Thomas, Lord Cromwell, Secretary to Henry VIII and Vicar General. In 1538, Cromwell directed the clergy to provide "one book of the bible of the largest volume in English, and the same set up in some convenient place within the said church that ye have care of, whereas your parishioners may most commodiously resort to the same and read it."