Loading...

Interlinear Textus Receptus Bibles shown verse by verse.

Textus Receptus Bible chapters shown in parallel with your selection of Bibles.

Compares the 1550 Stephanus Textus Receptus with the King James Bible.

Visit the library for more information on the Textus Receptus.

Textus Receptus Bibles

William Tyndale Bible 1534

New Testament

   

5:1It came to passe as the people preased vpon him to heare the worde of God that he stoode by the lake of Genezareth:
5:2and sawe two shippes stonde by the lake syde but the fisshermen were gone out of the and were wasshynge their nettes.
5:3And he entred in to one of the shippes which perteyned to Simon and prayed him that he wolde thrust out a litell from the londe. And he sate doune and taught the people out of the ship.
5:4When he had leeft speakynge he sayde vnto Simon: Launche out in to the depe and let slippe youre nettes to make a draught
5:5And Simon answered and sayde to him: Master we have labored all nyght and have taken nothinge. Neverthelater at thy worde I will loose forthe the net.
5:6And when they had so done they inclosed a greate multitude of fisshes. And their net brake:
5:7but they made signes to their felowes which were in the other ship that they shuld come and helpe the And they came: and filled bothe the shippes that they soncke agayne.
5:8When Simon Peter sawe that he fell doune at Iesus knees sayinge: Lorde goo
5:9fro me for I am a synfull man. For he was vtterly astonyed and all that were wt him at ye draught of fisshe which they toke:
5:10and so was also Iames and Iohn ye sonnes of zebede which were parteners wt Simon. And Iesus sayde vnto Simon: feare not fro hence forthe thou shalt catche men.
5:11And they brought the shippes to londe and forsoke all and folowed him.
5:12And it fortuned as he was in a certayne cite: beholde ther was a man full of leprosy: and when he had spied Iesus he fell on his face and besought him sayinge: Lorde yf thou wilt thou canst make me cleane.
5:13And he strethed forth ye hond and touched him sayinge: I will be thou cleane. And immediatly the leprosy departed from him.
5:14And he warned him that he shuld tell no man: but that he shuld goo and shewe him selfe to the Preste and offer for his clensynge accordinge as Moses commaundement was for a witnes vnto them.
5:15But so moche the moare went ther a fame abroade of him and moche people cam to geder to heare and to be healed of him of their infirmities.
5:16And he kepte him silfe aparte in ye wildernesses and gave him silfe to prayer.
5:17And it happened on a certayne daye that he taught: and ther sate the pharises: and docturs of lawe which were come out of all ye tounes of Galile Iurie and Hierusalem. And the power of the Lorde was to heale the.
5:18And beholde me brought a man lyinge in his beed which was taken with a palsie: and sought meanes to brynge him in and to laye him before him.
5:19And whe they coulde not finde by what waye they might bringe him in be cause of ye prease they wet vp on the toppe of ye housse and let him doune thorowe the tylinge beed and all in the middes before Iesus.
5:20When he sawe their fayth he sayde vnto him: man thy synnes are forgeven the.
5:21And the Scribes and the Parises begane to thinke sayinge: What felow is this which speaketh blasphemy? Who can forgeve synnes but God only?
5:22When Iesus perceaved their thoughtes he answered and sayde vnto them: What thinke ye in youre hertes?
5:23Whether is easyar to saye thy synnes are forgeve the or to saye: rise and walke?
5:24But that ye maye knowe that the sonne of ma hath power to forgeve synnes on erth he sayde vnto ye sicke of the palsie: I saye to the aryse take vp thy beed and go home to thy housse.
5:25And immediatly he rose vp before them and toke vp his beed where on he laye and departed to his awne housse praysinge God.
5:26And they were all amased and they lauded God and were filled with feare sayinge: We have sene straunge thynges to daye.
5:27And after that he went forthe and sawe a Publican named Levi sittinge at the receyte of custome and sayde vnto him: folow me.
5:28And he leeft all roose vp and folowed him.
5:29And that same Levi made him a greate feaste at home in his awne housse. And ther was a greate copany of publicans and of other that sate at meate with him.
5:30And the Scribes and Pharises murmured agaynst his disciples sayinge: Why eate ye and drinke ye with publicas and synners?
5:31Iesus answered and sayde vnto the: They yt are whole nede not of ye phisicion: but they yt are sicke.
5:32I came not to call ye rightewes but synners to repentauce.
5:33Then they sayde vnto him: Why do the disciples of Iohn fast often and praye and the disciples of ye Pharises also: and thine eate and drinke?
5:34And he sayde vnto them: Can ye make ye chyldren of the weddinge fast as longe as ye brydgrome is present with the?
5:35The dayes will come whe the brydgrome shalbe take awaye from them: then shall they fast in those dayes
5:36Then he spake vnto them in a similitude: No ma putteth a pece of a newe garment in to an olde vesture: for yf he do: then breaketh he the newe and the pece that was taken out of the newe agreeth not wt the olde.
5:37Also no ma poureth newe wyne into olde vessels. For yf he do the newe wyne breaketh the vessels and runneth out it silfe and the vessels perisshe:
5:38But newe wyne must be poured into newe vessels and bothe are preserved.
5:39Also no man yt drinketh olde wine strayght waye can awaye with newe for he sayeth ye olde is plesauter.
Tyndale Bible 1534

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.