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Textus Receptus Bibles

Matthew's Bible 1537

   

14:1Man that is borne of a woman, hath but a shorte tyme to lyue, and is full of diuerse miseries.
14:2He commeth vp and falleth awaye lyke a floure. He flyeth as it were a shadowe, and neuer continueth in one state.
14:3Thynkest thou it now well done to open thyne eyes vpon soche one, and to brynge me before the in iudgement?
14:4Who can make it cleane, that commeth of an vncleane thynge? No body.
14:5The dayes of man are shorte, the nombre of his monethes are knowne only vnto the. Thou hast apoynted hym his boundes, he can not go beyond them.
14:6Goo from him, that he maye rest a lytle: vntyll hys daye come, whiche he loketh for, lyke as an hyrelynge doth.
14:7If a tre be cut downe, there is some hope yet, that it wyll sproute and shute forth the braunches agayne:
14:8For though a rote be waxen olde and deed in the grounde, yet when the stocke
14:9getteth the sent of water, yt wyll budde, and brynge forth bowes, lyke as whent it was fyrst planted.
14:10But as for man, when he is deed, perysshed and consumed awaye, what becommeth of hym?
14:11The floudes when they be dryed vp, and the ryuers when they be emptie, are fylled agayne thorowe the flowynge waters of the sea:
14:12but when man slepeth, he ryseth not agayne, vntyll the heauen perish: he shall not wake vp ner ryse out of his slepe.
14:13O that thou woldest kepe me, and hyde me in the hell, vntyll thy wrath were stylled: and to appoynte me a tyme, wherin thou myghtest remembre me.
14:14Maye a deed man lyue agayne? All the dayes of thys my pilgremage am I lokynge, when my chaunginge shall come.
14:15If thou woldest but call me, I shulde obeye the, only despyse not the worke of thyne owne handes.
14:16For thou hast nombred all my goynges, yet be not thou to extreame vpon my synnes.
14:17Thou haste sealed vp myne offences, as it were in a bagge: but be mercyfull vnto my wyckednesse.
14:18The mountaynes fall awaye at the last, the rockes are remoued out of theyr place,
14:19the waters pearse thorow the very stones by lytle & litle, the floudes wasshe away the grauell & earth: Euen so destroyest thou the hope of man in lyke maner.
14:20Thou preuaylest agaynst hym, so that he passeth awaye: thou chaungest his estate, & puttest hym from the.
14:21Whether his chyldren come to worshippe or no, he can not tell: And yf they be men of lowe degre, he knoweth not.
14:22While he liueth his flesh must haue trauayle: and whyle the soule is in hym, he must be in sorowe.
Matthew's Bible 1537

Matthew's Bible 1537

The Matthew Bible, also known as Matthew's Version, was first published in 1537 by John Rogers, under the pseudonym "Thomas Matthew". It combined the New Testament of William Tyndale, and as much of the Old Testament as he had been able to translate before being captured and put to death, with the translations of Myles Coverdale as to the balance of the Old Testament and the Apocrypha, except the Apocryphal Prayer of Manasses. It is thus a vital link in the main sequence of English Bible translations.