Verse 1
And the pharisees came together vnto hym, & certayne of the scribes which came from Hierusalem.
Verse 2
And whe they sawe some of his disciples eate bread with common that is to say, with vnwasshen hands, they founde fault.
Verse 3
For the pharisees and all the Iewes, except they wasshe their handes oft, eate not, obseruing the traditions of ye elders.
Verse 4
And when they come from the market, except they wasshe, they eate not. And many other things there be, which they haue taken vpon them to obserue as the wasshyng of cuppes and pottes, and brasen vessels, and of tables.
Verse 5
Then asked hym the pharisees and scribes: Why walke not thy disciples accordyng to the traditio of the elders, but eate bread with vnwasshen handes?
Verse 6
He aunswered, and sayde vnto them, that Esaias hath prophesied well of you hypocrites, as it is written: This people honoreth me with their lippes, but their heart is farre from me.
Verse 7
Howebeit, in vayne do they worship me, teachyng doctrines, the commaundementes of men.
Verse 8
For ye laye the commaundement of God apart, and obserue the tradition of me: as the wasshing of pottes & cuppes. And many other such like thinges ye do.
Verse 9
And he sayde vnto them: Well, ye cast asyde the commaundement of God, to mayntayne your owne tradition.
Verse 10
For Moyses sayde, Honor thy father and thy mother: and, who so curseth father or mother, let him dye the death.
Verse 11
But ye say, yf a man shall say to father or mother Corban (that is, by the gyft) that is offred of me, thou shalt be helped.
Verse 12
And so ye suffer hym no more to do ought for his father or his mother.
Verse 13
And make the worde of God of none effect, through your tradition, which ye haue ordeyned. And many such thinges do ye.
Verse 14
And when he had called all the people vnto hym, he saide vnto them: Hearken vnto me, euery one of you, and vnderstande.
Verse 15
There is nothyng without a man, that can defyle hym, when it entreth into hym: But the thynges whiche proceade out of a man, those are they that defyle the man.
Verse 16
If any man haue eares to heare, let hym heare.
Verse 17
And when he came into the house, away from the people, his disciples asked hym of the similitude.
Verse 18
And he sayde vnto them: Are ye also so without vnderstandyng? Do ye not yet perceaue, that whatsoeuer thing fro without, entreth into a man, it can not defyle hym,
Verse 19
Because it entreth not into his heart, but into the belly, and goeth out into the draught, purgyng all meates?
Verse 20
And he sayde: That which commeth out of a man, defyleth the man.
Verse 21
For from within, euen out of the heart of men, proceade euyll thoughtes, adulterie, fornication, murther,
Verse 22
Theft, couetousnes, wickednes, deceit, wantonnes, a wicked eye, blasphemies, pride, foolyshnes.
Verse 23
All these euyll thynges come fro within, and defyle a man.
Verse 24
And from thence he rose, and went into the borders of Tyre and Sidon, & entred into an house, and woulde that no man shoulde haue knowen: but he coulde not be hyd.
Verse 25
For a certayne woman, whose young daughter hadde an vncleane spirite, assoone as she hearde of hym, came, & fell at his feete.
Verse 26
The woman was a Greke, out of the nation of Syrophenissa: & she besought hym, that he woulde cast out the deuyll from her daughter.
Verse 27
But Iesus saide vnto her, let the children first be fedde: For it is not meete to take the chyldrens bread, and to caste it vnto litle dogges.
Verse 28
She aunswered, and saide vnto hym, euen so Lorde: neuerthelesse, the litle dogges also eate vnder the table, of the chyldrens crumbes.
Verse 29
And he sayde vnto her: For this saying, go thy way, the deuyll is gone out of thy daughter.
Verse 30
And when she was come home to her house, she founde that the deuyll was departed, and her daughter lying on the bedde.
Verse 31
And he departed agayne from the coastes of Tyre and Sidon, & came vnto the sea of Galilee, through the middes of the coastes of the ten cities.
Verse 32
And they brought vnto hym one that was deafe, and had an impediment in his speache: and they prayed him to put his hande vpon hym.
Verse 33
And when he had taken hym asyde from the people, he put his fyngers into his cares, and dyd spyt, and touched his tongue,
Verse 34
And loked vp to heauen, and syghed, and sayde vnto him Ephphatha, that is to say, be opened.
Verse 35
And straightway his eares were opened, and the stryng of his tongue was loosed, and he spake playne.
Verse 36
And he commaunded them, that they shoulde tell no man: But the more he forbad them, so much the more a great deale they published it.
Verse 37
And were beyonde measure astonyed, saying: He hath done all thynges well, he hath made both the deafe to heare, and the dumbe to speake.