Luke 15:19
And am no more worthy to be called thy sonne, make me as one of thy hyred seruauntes.
And am no more worthy to be called thy sonne, make me as one of thy hyred seruauntes.
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20And he arose, and came to his father. But when he was yet a great way of, his father sawe him, & had compassion, and ranne, and fell on his necke, and kissed hym.
21And the sonne sayde vnto him: Father, I haue sinned agaynst heauen, and in thy syght, and am no more worthy to be called thy sonne.
22But the father saide to his seruauntes: bryng foorth the best garment, and put it on hym, and put a ryng on his hande, and shoes on his feete:
23And bryng hyther that fat calfe, and kyll it, and let vs eate and be mery:
24For this my sonne was dead, and is aliue agayne, he was lost, and is founde. And they began to be mery.
25The elder brother was in the fielde: and when he came and drewe nye to the house, he hearde minstrelsie & daunsing,
26And called one of his seruauntes, and asked, what those thynges meant.
27And he sayde vnto hym: thy brother is come, and thy father hath kylled the fat calfe, because he hath receaued hym safe and sounde.
28And he was angry, and woulde not go in: Therfore came his father out, and entreated hym.
29He aunswered and sayde to his father: Lo, these many yeres haue I done thee seruice, neither brake I at any tyme thy commaundement, and yet thou neuer gauest me a kidde to make mery with my friendes:
30But assoone as this thy sonne was come, which hath deuoured thy goodes with harlottes, thou hast for his pleasure kylled that fat calfe.
31And he sayde vnto hym: Sonne, thou art euer with me, and all that I haue, is thyne,
32It was meete that we shoulde make mery and be glad: for this thy brother was dead, and is alyue agayne: and was lost, and is founde.
11And he sayde. A certayne man had two sonnes:
12And the younger of them sayde to his father: father, geue me the portion of the goodes, that to me belongeth. And he deuided vnto them his substaunce.
13And not long after, when the younger sonne had gathered all that he had together, he toke his iourney into a farre countrey, and there wasted his goodes with riotous lyuyng.
14And when he had spent all, there arose a great dearth in all that lande, and he began to lacke.
15And he ioyned hym selfe to a citizen of that countrey: and he sent hym to his farme, to feede swyne.
16And he woulde fayne haue fylled his belly with the coddes that the swyne dyd eate: and no man gaue vnto hym.
17Then he came to hym selfe, and sayde: Howe many hyred seruauntes at my fathers house haue bread inough, and I perishe with hunger?
18I wyll aryse, and go to my father, and wyll say vnto hym: Father, I haue sinned agaynst heauen, and before thee,
28But what thynke you? A man had two sonnes, and came to the firste, and saide: sonne, go and worke to day in my vineyarde.
29He aunswered and saide, I wyll not: but afterwarde he repented, and went.
30Then came he to the seconde, & sayde lykewyse. And he aunswered & saide, I wyll sir, and went not.
2And he called hym, and sayde vnto hym: Howe is it, that I heare this of thee? Geue accomptes of thy stewardeshyppe, for thou mayest be no longer stewarde.
3The stewarde sayde within hymselfe: What shall I do, for my maister taketh away from me the stewardshyppe? I can not digge, & to begge I am ashamed.
4I wote what to do, that when I am put out of the stewardshippe, they may receaue me into their houses.
5So, whe he had called all his maisters detters together, he sayde vnto the first: Howe muche owest thou vnto my maister?
18When he came to his father, he sayde: my father? And he aunswered, here am I: who art thou, my sonne?
3But he put foorth this parable vnto them, saying:
13And the publicane standyng a farre of, woulde not lyft vp his eyes to heauen, but smote vpon his brest, saying: God be mercifull to me a sinner.
25But forasmuch as he had not to pay, his Lorde commaunded hym to be solde, and his wyfe, and chyldren, and all that he had, and payment to be made.
26The seruaunt fell downe, & besought hym, saying: Lorde, haue pacience with me, and I wyll pay thee all.
7But which of you, hauyng a seruaunt plowyng, or feedyng cattell, woulde say vnto hym by & by when he were come from the fielde, go and syt downe at the table:
8And woulde not rather say vnto hym, dresse, wherwith I may suppe, & gyrde vp thy selfe, and serue me, tyll I haue eaten and dronken, and afterward eate thou, and drynke thou?
27Then he sayde: I pray thee therfore father, sende hym to my fathers house.
32Then his Lorde called hym, and sayd vnto him: O thou vngracious seruaunt, I forgaue thee all that debt, when thou desiredst me:
7Wherfore thou art no more a seruaunt, but a sonne: If thou be a sonne, thou art also an heire of God, through Christ.
37But laste of all, he sent vnto them his owne sonne, saying: they wyll stande in awe of my sonne.
13Then said the Lord of the vineyarde: What shal I do? I wyl send my deare sonne, it may be they wyll reuerence hym, when they see hym.
29And his felowe fel downe at his feete, and besought him, saying: haue pacience with me, and I wyll pay thee all.
6And assoone as he commeth home, he calleth together his louers and neyghbours, saying vnto them: Reioyce with me, for I haue founde my sheepe which was lost.
19I haue thought thus: howe shall I take thee to be my children, and geue a pleasaunt lande for thine heritage, yea and a goodly hoast of the heathen? And I sayd, Call me father, and shrincke not from me.
18Also his brethren came vnto hym, and fell flat before his face, saying: beholde, we be thy seruauntes.
12He sayde therfore: A certayne noble man went into a farre countrey, to receaue for hym selfe a kyngdome, and to come agayne.
33Nowe therefore I pray thee, let me thy seruaunt byde here for the lad, and be my lordes bondman, and let the lad go vp with his brethren.
14Take that thyne is, and go thy way: I wyll geue vnto this last, euen as vnto thee.
15Hencefoorth call I you not seruautes: for the seruaunt knoweth not what his Lorde doeth. But you haue I called frendes, for all thynges that I haue hearde of my father, haue I made knowen to you.
10For the sonne of man is come to seke, and to saue that which was lost.
21And the seruaunt returned, & shewed his maister these thynges. Then was the good man of the house displeased, & sayde to his seruaunt: Go out quickly into the brode streates and lanes of the citie, and bryng in hyther the poore, and the feeble, and the halt, and the blynde.