Memorials: With Matters Relating to the Promulgation of the Bible |
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Page 2
... doubt , therefore , that Coverdale was a personal , not an inherited name ; and as all writers agree in stating that he was born in Yorkshire , " it may not be unfair to presume that he took his name from the place of his birth , and ...
... doubt , therefore , that Coverdale was a personal , not an inherited name ; and as all writers agree in stating that he was born in Yorkshire , " it may not be unfair to presume that he took his name from the place of his birth , and ...
Page 9
... doubt what would be the measures used with ' regard to those who maintained reformed opinions , when one of its chief members was thus singled out as a heretic . But whether it was that they thought that a display of their number and ...
... doubt what would be the measures used with ' regard to those who maintained reformed opinions , when one of its chief members was thus singled out as a heretic . But whether it was that they thought that a display of their number and ...
Page 10
... doubt- less Coverdale , as the friend and pupil of Barnes , was one of them . However , matters were so well managed , that they had intimation of the intended search from Dr. Farman , of Queen's , and had time to convey away or conceal ...
... doubt- less Coverdale , as the friend and pupil of Barnes , was one of them . However , matters were so well managed , that they had intimation of the intended search from Dr. Farman , of Queen's , and had time to convey away or conceal ...
Page 17
... doubt will conta- " minate and infect the flock committed unto us with " most deadly poison and heresy , to the grievous perill " and danger of the soules committed to our charge , " and the offence of God's divine Majesty . " C He ...
... doubt will conta- " minate and infect the flock committed unto us with " most deadly poison and heresy , to the grievous perill " and danger of the soules committed to our charge , " and the offence of God's divine Majesty . " C He ...
Page 45
... doubt perceived the effect of these petitions , and therefore forbore to present them , and so the matter dropped . But although they gained for the time their point thus far , in making the resolutions agreed on of no avail , they had ...
... doubt perceived the effect of these petitions , and therefore forbore to present them , and so the matter dropped . But although they gained for the time their point thus far , in making the resolutions agreed on of no avail , they had ...
Other editions - View all
Memorials: With Matters Relating to the Promulgation of the Bible Miles Coverdale, Jr. No preview available - 2015 |
Memorials: With Matters Relating to the Promulgation of the Bible - Primary ... Miles Coverdale No preview available - 2013 |
Common terms and phrases
Acts and Monuments afterwards Anno authority Bethleem bishop bishop of Exeter boke Byble calf half extra Christ church cloth COMMON PRAYER copy Cranmer CRUDEN'S CONCORDANCE daye doctrines edition England ENGLISH VERSION Epistles euen euery favour fayth Fox's Acts FRENCH fyrst German godly Gospels grace GREEK and ENGLISH hath haue HEBREW HEBREW BIBLE Herbert heresy Hist interleaved ITALIAN Jesus king king's kynge Latin latyn letter limp Morocco London Lord Cromwell lordship majesty maye moost mother of Jesus Myles Coverdale neat calf preached printed printer proclamation prynted PSALMS queen reader reformed religion reprint sayde vnto sayeth vnto says SEPTUAGINT shulde soch sonne SPANISH SPANISH TESTAMENTS Stry Strype ther therfore therin therof theyr thynge tion translation Turkey Morocco tyme Tyndal unto vnder vnto hym vpon Vulgate whan whych wood-cut worde wyfe wyne wyth yf thou
Popular passages
Page 27 - Tables for Land Valuers. THE LAND VALUER'S BEST ASSISTANT: being Tables, on a very much improved Plan, for Calculating the Value of Estates.
Page 79 - Grace, if you can, a license that the same may be sold and read of every person, without danger of any act, proclamation, or ordinance heretofore granted to the contrary, until such time that we the bishops shall set forth a better translation, which I think will not be till a day after doomsday d.
Page 108 - It was wonderful to see with what. joy this book of God was received not only among the learneder sort and those that were noted for lovers of the reformation, but generally all England over among all the vulgar and common people; and with what greediness God's word was read and what resort to places where the reading of it was.
Page 121 - ... with him discretion, honest intent, charity, reverence, and quiet behaviour ; that there should no such number meet together there as to make a multitude ; that no such exposition be made thereupon but what is declared in the book itself; that it be not read with noise in time of divine service...
Page 40 - Out of this sprung the noise of the new Bible; and out of that is the great seeking for English books at all printers and bookbinders in Antwerp, and for an English priest that should print.
Page 43 - I marvel what my lord of Canterbury meaneth, that thus abuseth the people, in giving them liberty to read the Scriptures, which doth nothing else but infect them with heresy. I have bestowed never an hour upon my portion, nor never \vilL And therefore my lord shall have his book again, for I will never be guilty of bringing the simple people into error.
Page 121 - ... one Bible at the least set at liberty so that every man might freely come to it and read therein such things as should be for his consolation, many of this wicked generation, as well priests as other their faithful adherents would pluck it either into the quire or else into some pew where poor men durst not presume to come. Yea, there is no small number of churches that hath no Bible at all.
Page 216 - Apocripha The bokes and treatises which " amonge the fathers of olde are not rekened to be of like authorite with " the other bokes of the byble, nether are they foude in the Canon of
Page 57 - Douche inter" preters : whom (because of theyr syngular gyftes " 5 speciall diligence in the Bible) I haue ben " the more glad to folowe for the most parte, ac" cordynge as I was requyred. But to saye the " trueth before God, it was nether my laboure ner " desyre, to haue this worke put in my hande : neuer
Page 17 - ... peremptory term, under pain of excommunication, and incurring the suspicion of heresy, they do bring in, and really deliver unto our vicar-general, all and singular such books as contain the translation of the New Testament in the English tongue ; and that...