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Interlinear Textus Receptus Bibles shown verse by verse.

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Textus Receptus Bibles

Young's Literal Translation 1862

   

146:1Praise ye Jah! Praise, O my soul, Jehovah.
146:2I praise Jehovah during my life, I sing praise to my God while I exist.
146:3Trust not in princes -- in a son of man, For he hath no deliverance.
146:4His spirit goeth forth, he returneth to his earth, In that day have his thoughts perished.
146:5O the happiness of him Who hath the God of Jacob for his help, His hope `is' on Jehovah his God,
146:6Making the heavens and earth, The sea and all that `is' in them, Who is keeping truth to the age,
146:7Doing judgment for the oppressed, Giving bread to the hungry.
146:8Jehovah is loosing the prisoners, Jehovah is opening (the eyes of) the blind, Jehovah is raising the bowed down, Jehovah is loving the righteous,
146:9Jehovah is preserving the strangers, The fatherless and widow He causeth to stand, And the way of the wicked He turneth upside down.
146:10Jehovah doth reign to the age, Thy God, O Zion, to generation and generation, Praise ye Jah!
Young's Literal Translation 1862

Young's Literal Translation 1862

Young's Literal Translation is a translation of the Bible into English, published in 1862. The translation was made by Robert Young, compiler of Young's Analytical Concordance to the Bible and Concise Critical Comments on the New Testament. Young used the Textus Receptus and the Majority Text as the basis for his translation. He wrote in the preface to the first edition, "It has been no part of the Translator's plan to attempt to form a New Hebrew or Greek Text--he has therefore somewhat rigidly adhered to the received ones."