Textus Receptus Bibles
William Tyndale Bible 1534
New Testament
12:1 | As ther gadered together an innumerable multitude of people (in so moche that they trood one another) he began to saye vnto his disciples: Fyrst of all beware of the leve of the Pharises which is ypocrisy. |
12:2 | For ther is no thinge covered that shall not be vncovered: nether hyd that shall not be knowen. |
12:3 | For whatsoever ye have spoken in in darknes: that same shalbe hearde in light. And that which ye have spoken in the the eare eve in secret places shalbe preached even on the toppe of the housses. |
12:4 | I saye vnto you my fredes: Be not afrayde of them that kyll the body and after that have no moare that they can do. |
12:5 | But I will shewe you whom ye shall feare. Feare him which after he hath killed hath power to cast into hell. Ye I saye vnto you him feare. |
12:6 | Are not five sparowes bought for two farthinges? And yet not one of them is forgotten of God. |
12:7 | Also even the very heres of youre heedes are nombred. Feare not therfore: ye are moare of value then many sparowes. |
12:8 | I saye vnto you: Whosoever confesseth me before men eve him shall ye sonne of man confesse also before ye angels of God. |
12:9 | And he that denyeth me before men: shalbe denyed before ye angels of God. |
12:10 | And whosoever speaketh a worde agaynst ye sonne of ma it shalbe forgeven him. But vnto him yt blasphemeth the holy goost it shall not be forgeven. |
12:11 | When they bringe you vnto the synagoges and vnto the rulers and officers take no thought how or what thinge ye shall answer or what ye shall speake. |
12:12 | For the holy goost shall teache you in the same houre what ye ought to saye. |
12:13 | One of the company sayde vnto hym: Master byd my brother devide the enheritauce with me. |
12:14 | And he sayde vnto him: Man who made me a iudge or a devider over you? |
12:15 | Wherfore he sayde vnto them: take hede and beware of covetousnes. For no mannes lyfe stondeth in the aboundaunce of the thinges which he possesseth. |
12:16 | And he put forth a similitude vnto them sayinge: The groude of a certayne riche ma brought forth frutes plenteously |
12:17 | and he thought in himsilfe sayinge: what shall I do? because I have noo roume where to bestowe my frutes? |
12:18 | And he sayde: This will I do. I will destroye my barnes and bilde greater and therin will I gadder all my frutes and my goodes: |
12:19 | and I will saye to my soule: Soule thou hast moch goodes layde vp in stoore for many yeares take thyne ease: eate drinke and be mery. |
12:20 | But God sayde vnto him: Thou fole this night will they fetche awaye thy soule agayne from the. Then whose shall thoose thinges be which thou hast provyded? |
12:21 | So is it with him that gadereth ryches and is not ryche in God. |
12:22 | And he spake vnto his disciples: Therfore I saye vnto you: take no thought for youre lyfe what ye shall eate nether for youre body what ye shall put on. |
12:23 | The lyfe is moare then meate and the bodye is moare then rayment. |
12:24 | Considre the ravens for they nether sowe nor repe which nether have stoorehousse ner barne and yet God fedeth them. How moche are ye better then the foules. |
12:25 | Which of you with takynge thought can adde to his stature one cubit? |
12:26 | Yf ye then be not able to do that thinge which is least: why take ye thought for the remmaunt? |
12:27 | Considre the lylies how they growe: They laboure not: they spyn not: and yet I saye vnto you that Salomon in all this royalte was not clothed lyke to one of these. |
12:28 | Yf the grasse which is todaye in the felde and tomorowe shalbe cast into the fornace God so clothe: how moche moore will he clothe you o ye endued wt litell faith? |
12:29 | And axe not what ye shall eate or what ye shall drinke nether clyme ye vp an hye |
12:30 | for all suche thinges the hethen people of the worlde seke for. Youre father knoweth that ye have nede of suche thinges. |
12:31 | Wherfore seke ye after the kyngedome of God and all these thinges shalbe ministred vnto you. |
12:32 | Feare not litell floocke for it is youre fathers pleasure to geve you a kingdome. |
12:33 | Sell that ye have and geve almes. And make you bagges which wexe not olde and treasure that fayleth not in heaven where noo these commeth nether moth corrupteth. |
12:34 | For where youre treasure is there will youre hertes be also. |
12:35 | Let youre loynes be gerdde about and youre lightes brennynge |
12:36 | and ye youre selves lyke vnto men that wayte for their master when he will returne fro a weddinge: that assone as he cometh and knocketh they maye ope vnto him. |
12:37 | Happy are those servauntes which the Lorde when he cometh shall fynde wakynge. Verely I saye vnto you he will gerdde him selfe about and make them sit doune to meate and walke by and minister vnto them. |
12:38 | And yf he come in the seconde watche ye if he come in the thyrde watche and shall fynde them soo happy are those servauntes. |
12:39 | This vnderstonde that yf the good man of the housse knewe what houre ye these wolde come he wolde suerly watche: and not suffer his housse to be broken vp. |
12:40 | Be ye prepared therfore: for the sonne of man will come at an houre when ye thinke not. |
12:41 | Then Peter sayde vnto him: Master tellest thou this similitude vnto vs or to all men? |
12:42 | And the Lorde sayde: If there be any faith full servaut and wise whom his Lorde shall make ruler over his housholde to geve them their duetie of meate at due season: |
12:43 | happy is that servaunt whom his master when he cometh shall finde soo doinge. |
12:44 | Of a trueth I saye vnto you: that he will make him ruler over all that he hath. |
12:45 | But and yf the evyll servaunt shall saye in his hert: My master wyll differre his cominge and shall beginne to smyte the servauntes and maydens and to eate and drinke and to be dronken: |
12:46 | the Lorde of that servaunt will come in a daye when he thinketh not and at an houre when he is not ware and will devyde him and will geve him his rewarde with the vnbelevers. |
12:47 | The servaut that knewe his masters will and prepared not him selfe nether dyd accordinge to his will shalbe bete with many strypes. |
12:48 | But he that knewe not and yet dyd committe thinges worthy of strypes shalbe beaten with feawe strypes. For vnto whom moche is geven of him shalbe moche requyred. And to whom men moche commyt the moare of him will they axe. |
12:49 | I am come to sende fyre on erth: and what is my dysyre but that it were all redy kyndled? |
12:50 | Not with stondinge I must de baptised with a baptyme: and how am I payned till it be ended? |
12:51 | Suppose ye that I am come to sende peace on erth? I tell you naye: but rather debate. |
12:52 | For fro hence forthe ther shalbe five in one housse devided thre agaynst two and two agaynst thre. |
12:53 | The father shalbe devided agaynst the sonne and the sonne agaynst the father. The mother agaynst the doughter and the doughter agaynst the mother. The motereleawe agaynst hir doughterelawe and the doughterelawe agaynst hir motherelawe. |
12:54 | Then sayde he to the people: when ye se a cloude ryse out of the west strayght waye ye saye: we shall have a shower and soo it is. |
12:55 | And when ye se the south wynde blow ye saye: we shall have heet and it cometh to passe. |
12:56 | Ypocrites ye can skyll of the fassion of the erth and of the skye: but what is ye cause that ye canot skyll of this time? |
12:57 | Ye and why iudge ye not of youre selves what is righte? |
12:58 | Whill thou goest with thyne adversary to the ruler: as thou arte in the waye geve diligence that thou mayst be delivered fro him least he bringe the to the iudge and the iudge delyver the to the iaylar and the iaylar cast the in to preson. |
12:59 | I tell ye thou departest not thence tyll thou have made good ye vtmost myte. |
William Tyndale Bible 1534
William Tyndale was the first man to ever print the New Testament in the English language. Tyndale also went on to be the first to translate much of the Old Testament from the original Hebrew into English, but he was executed in 1536 for the "crime" of printing the scriptures in English before he could personally complete the printing of an entire Bible. His friends Myles Coverdale, and John [Thomas Matthew] Rogers, managed to evade arrest and publish entire Bibles in the English language for the first time, and within one year of Tyndale's death. These Bibles were primarily the work of William Tyndale.