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Textus Receptus Bibles

King James Bible 1611

   

8:1[To the chiefe Musicion vpon Gittith, a Psalme of Dauid.] O Lord our Lord, how excellent is thy name in all the earth! who hast set thy glory aboue the heauens.
8:2Out of the mouth of babes and sucklings hast thou ordained strength, because of thine enemies, that thou mightest still the enemie and the auenger.
8:3When I consider thy heauens, the worke of thy fingers, the moone and the starres which thou hast ordained;
8:4What is man, that thou art mindfull of him? and the sonne of man, that thou visitest him?
8:5For thou hast made him a little lower then the Angels; and hast crowned him with glory and honour.
8:6Thou madest him to haue dominion ouer the workes of thy hands; thou hast put all things vnder his feete.
8:7All sheepe and oxen, yea and the beasts of the field.
8:8The foule of the aire, and the fish of the sea, and whatsoeuer passeth through the paths of the seas.
8:9O Lord our Lord, how excellent is thy name in all the earth!
King James Bible 1611

King James Bible 1611

The commissioning of the King James Bible took place at a conference at the Hampton Court Palace in London England in 1604. When King James came to the throne he wanted unity and stability in the church and state, but was well aware that the diversity of his constituents had to be considered. There were the Papists who longed for the English church to return to the Roman Catholic fold and the Latin Vulgate. There were Puritans, loyal to the crown but wanting even more distance from Rome. The Puritans used the Geneva Bible which contained footnotes that the king regarded as seditious. The Traditionalists made up of Bishops of the Anglican Church wanted to retain the Bishops Bible.

The king commissioned a new English translation to be made by over fifty scholars representing the Puritans and Traditionalists. They took into consideration: the Tyndale New Testament, the Matthews Bible, the Great Bible and the Geneva Bible. The great revision of the Bible had begun. From 1605 to 1606 the scholars engaged in private research. From 1607 to 1609 the work was assembled. In 1610 the work went to press, and in 1611 the first of the huge (16 inch tall) pulpit folios known today as "The 1611 King James Bible" came off the printing press.