Tyndale's New TestamentDavid Daniell Yale University Press, 1995 M01 1 - 429 pages This translation of the New Testament into English from its original Greek was printed in Germany in 1534 and smuggled back into England. It therefore escaped the fate of Tyndale's previous version, which had been seized and publicly burnt by the authorities. The 1534 edition outraged the clerical establishment by giving the laity access to the word of God, in print in English for the first time. Tyndale, who was already in exile for political reasons, was hunted down and subsequently burned at the stake for blasphemy. For the next eighty years--the years of Shakespeare among others--Tyndale's masterly translation formed the basis of all English bibles. And when the authorized King James Bible was published in 1611, many of its finest passages were taken unchanged, though unacknowledged, from Tyndale's work. Although, therefore, this astounding work of pioneering scholarship was the basis of all subsequent English bibles until after the Second World War, and though it was the version of the Bible used by some of our greatest poets, it is today virtually unknown because of its suppression for political reasons because of its difficult early sixteenth-century spelling. Now for the first time this version is published in modern spelling, as the modern book it once was, so that this masterly work of English prose by one of the great geniuses of the as is available to today's reader. |
Contents
William Tyndale yet once more to the Christian Reader | 13 |
The Gospel of St Mark | 62 |
The Gospel of St Luke | 88 |
The Gospel of Saint John | 133 |
The Acts of the Apostles | 165 |
A Prologue to the Epistle of Paul to the Romans | 207 |
The Epistle of the Apostle St Paul to the Romans | 225 |
The Prologue upon the First Epistle of St Paul to the Corinthians | 243 |
The Prologue upon the Epistle of St Paul to the Philippians | 288 |
The Prologue to the Second Epistle of St Paul to the Thessalonians | 304 |
The First Epistle of St Paul unto Timothy | 309 |
The Prologue to the Epistle of St Paul unto Philemon | 323 |
A Prologue upon the Three Epistles of St John | 337 |
The Prologue upon the Epistles of Saints James and Judas | 361 |
The Epistles of the Old Testament | 391 |
Table of Epistles and Gospels | 409 |
The Prologue upon the Second Epistle of Saint Paul to the Corinthians | 261 |
The Prologue upon the Epistle of St Paul to the Galatians | 274 |
These things have I added | 429 |
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Common terms and phrases
angel apostles Authorised Version baptised behold believe Bible brethren called Capernaum cast CHAPTER circumcision cometh commanded congregation death deeds devil disciples doth earth evil faith father fear flesh Galilee Geneva Bible gentiles George Joye glory goeth gospel grace Greek hand hath hear heard heart heaven Hebrew Herod high priests holy ghost Israel Jerusalem Jesus answered Jesus Christ Jesus said unto Jews John judgement king kingdom kingdom of God Lord Jesus Christ Luke lust Mark Mark 14 Matt mercy minister Moses Paul Peter Pharisees pray preached prophets received rejoice righteousness sabbath day Sadducees saints saith sake say unto scripture sent servant shew sins spake speak spirit suffer synagogue temple Testament thine things thou art thou hast thou shalt thyself Trinity Sunday Tyndale Tyndale's unto thee Verily I say voice Wherefore whosoever word yourselves
References to this book
Heavenly Perspective: A Study of the Apostle Paul's Response to a Jewish ... Ian Smith No preview available - 2006 |