Textus Receptus Bibles
William Tyndale Bible 1534
New Testament
6:1 | Wherfore let vs leave ye doctryne pertayninge to the beginninge of a Christen man and let vs go vnto perfeccio and now no more laye the foundacio of repentaunce from deed workes and of fayth towarde God |
6:2 | of baptyme of doctryne and of layinge on of hondes and of resurreccion from deeth and of eternall iudgemet. |
6:3 | And so will we do yf God permitte. |
6:4 | For it is not possible yt they which were once lyghted and have tasted of the hevenly gyft and were become partetakers of the holy goost |
6:5 | and have tasted of the good worde of God and of the power of the worlde to come: |
6:6 | yf they faule shuld be renued agayne vnto repentaunce: for as moche as they have (as concerninge them selves) crucified the sonne of God a fresshe makynge a mocke of him. |
6:7 | For that erth which drinketh in the rayne wich cometh ofte vpon it and bringeth forth erbes mete for them that dresse it receaveth blessynge of god. |
6:8 | But that grounde which beareth thornes and bryars is reproved and is nye vnto cursynge: whose ende is to be burned. |
6:9 | Neverthelesse deare frendes we trust to se better of you and thynges which accompany saluacion though we thus speake. |
6:10 | For god is not vnrighteous that he shuld forget youre worke and laboure that procedeth of love which love shewed in his name which have ministred vnto the saynctes and yet minister |
6:11 | Yee and we desyre that every one of you shew the same diligence to the stablysshynge of hope even vnto the ende: |
6:12 | that ye faynt not but folowe them which thorow fayth and pacience inheret the promyses. |
6:13 | For when god made promes to Abraham because he had no greater thinge to sweare by he sware by him silfe |
6:14 | sayinge: Surely I will blesse the and multiply the in dede. |
6:15 | And so after that he had taryed a longe tyme he enioyed the promes. |
6:16 | Men verely sweare by him that is greater then them selves and an othe to confyrme the thynge ys amonge them an ende of all stryfe. |
6:17 | So god willynge very aboundanly to shewe vnto the heyres of promes the stablenes of his counsayle he added an othe |
6:18 | that by two immutable thinges (in which it was vnpossible that god shuld lye) we myght have parfect consolacion which have fled for to holde fast the hope that is set before vs |
6:19 | which hope we have as an ancre of the soule both sure and stedfast. Which hope also entreth in into tho thynges which are with in the vayle |
6:20 | whither ye fore runner is for vs entred in I mea Iesus that is made an hye prest for ever after the order of Melchisedech. |
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.