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Textus Receptus Bibles

The Great Bible 1539

 

   

1:1The prouerbes of Salomon, the sonne of Dauid kynge of Israel:
1:2to learne wisdome, & to perceaue the instruccyon, and to perceaue the wordes of vnderstondynge: & therby to receaue prudence,
1:3ryghteousnes, iudgement and equite.
1:4That the very simple myght haue wyt, and that the yonge men myght haue knowledge and true vnderstanding.
1:5By hearing the wise man shall come by more wysedome: and he that is endewed wt vnderstanding
1:6shal optayn wit to perceaue a parable, & the interpretacyon therof, the wordes of the wyse, & the darcke speaches of the same.
1:7The feare of the Lorde is the begynnyng of wysdome. But fooles despyse wysdome & instruccion.
1:8My sonne, heare thy fathers doctrine: & forsake not the lawe of thy mother:
1:9for that shall bringe grace vnto thy heed, and shalbe as a cheyne about thy neck.
1:10My sonne, consente not vnto synners,
1:11yf they entise the, & saye: come with vs, we will laye wayte for bloude, & lurcke preuely for the innocent without a cause:
1:12we shall swalowe then vp lyke the hell, & deuoure them quycke and hole, as those that go downe into the pyt.
1:13So shall we fynde all maner of costelye ryches, & fill our houses wt spoyles.
1:14Cast in thy lot among vs: & let vs haue all one purse.
1:15My sonne, walke not thou with them: refrayne thy fote from their waye.
1:16For their fete runne to euell: & are hasty to shed bloud.
1:17But in vayn is the net laied forth before the byrdes eyes:
1:18yee they them selues laye wayte one for anothers bloud & one of them wold sleye another.
1:19These are the wayes of all soch as be couetous, the one wold rauysh anothers lyfe.
1:20Wisdome cryeth wtout, & putteth forth her voyce in the stretes.
1:21She calleth before the congregacyon in the open gates, & sheweth her wordes thorow the citye, saying:
1:22O ye children, how longe wyll ye loue childesshnes? how longe wyll the scorners delyte in scorning, & the vnwyse be enemyes vnto knowledge?
1:23O turne you vnto my correccion: lo, I wyll expresse my mynde vnto you, & make you vnderstande my wordes.
1:24I haue called, & ye refused it: I haue stretched out my hande: & no man regarded it:
1:25but all my councels haue ye despised: & set my correccion at naught.
1:26Therfore shall I also laugh in youre destruccion, & mocke you, when that thinge that ye feare commeth vpon you:
1:27euen when the thynge that ye be afrayed of, falleth in sodenly lyke a storme, & your misery lyke a tempest: yee, when trouble & heuines commeth vpon you.
1:28Then shal they call vpon me, but I wyll not heare: they shall seke me early, but they shall not fynde me.
1:29And that because they hated knowledge, & receaued not the feare of the Lorde:
1:30but abhorred my councell, and despysed all my correccion.
1:31Therfore shall they eate the frutes of theyr awne waye, & be filled with their awne inuencions:
1:32for the turnynge awaye of the vnwyse shall sleye them, and the prosperytie of fooles shalbe their awne destruccyon.
1:33But whoso harkneth vnto me, shall dwell safely, and be sure from any feare of euyll.
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."