Luke 15:17
Then he came to him selfe and sayde: how many hyred servauntes at my fathers have breed ynough and I dye for honger.
Then he came to him selfe and sayde: how many hyred servauntes at my fathers have breed ynough and I dye for honger.
These verses are found using AI-powered semantic similarity based on meaning and context. Results may occasionally include unexpected connections.
11And he sayde: a certayne man had two sonnes
12and the yonger of them sayde to his father: father geve me my parte of the goodes yt to me belongeth. And he devided vnto them his substaunce.
13And not longe after ye yonger sonne gaddered all that he had to gedder and toke his iorney into a farre countre and theare he wasted his goodes with royetous lyvinge.
14And when he had spent all that he had ther rose a greate derth thorow out all yt same londe and he began to lacke.
15And he went and clave to a citesyn of yt same countre which sent him to his felde to kepe his swyne.
16And he wold fayne have filled his bely with the coddes that ye swyne ate: and noo man gave him.
18I will aryse and goo to my father and will saye vnto him: father I have synned agaynst heven and before ye
19and am no moare worthy to be called thy sonne make me as one of thy hyred servauntes.
20And he arose and went to his father. And when he was yet a greate waye of his father sawe him and had compassion and ran and fell on his necke and kyssed him.
21And the sonne sayd vnto him: father I have synned agaynst heven and in thy sight and am no moare worthy to be called thy sonne.
22But his father sayde to his servautes: bringe forth that best garment and put it on him and put a rynge on his honde and showes on his fete.
23And bringe hidder that fatted caulfe and kyll him and let vs eate and be mery:
24for this my sonne was deed and is alyve agayne he was loste and is now founde. And they began to be merye.
25The elder brother was in the felde and when he cam and drewe nye to ye housse he herde minstrelcy and daunsynge
26and called one of his servauntes and axed what thoose thinges meate.
27And he sayd vnto him: thy brother is come and thy father had kylled ye fatted caulfe because he hath receaved him safe and sounde.
28And he was angry and wolde not goo in. Then came his father out and entreated him.
29He answered and sayde to his father: Loo these many yeares have I done the service nether brake at eny tyme thy commaundment and yet gavest thou me never soo moche as a kyd to make mery wt my lovers:
30but assone as this thy sonne was come which hath devoured thy goodes with harlootes thou haste for his pleasure kylled ye fatted caulfe.
31And he sayd vnto him: Sonne thou wast ever with me and all that I have is thyne:
32it was mete that we shuld make mery and be glad: for this thy brother was deed and is a lyve agayne: and was loste and is founde.
3Then put he forthe this similitude to the sayinge:
4What man of you havynge an hundred shepe yf he loose one of thee doth not leve nynty and nyne in the wyldernes and goo after yt which is loost vntyll he fynde him?
5And whe he hath founde him he putteth him on his shulders with ioye:
6And assone as he cometh home he calleth to gedder his lovers and neghbours sayinge vnto them: reioyse with me for I have founde my shepe which was loost.
3The stewarde sayd wt in him selfe: what shall I do? for my master will take awaye fro me ye stewarde shippe. I canot digge and to begge I am ashamed.
4I woote what to do yt when I am put out of ye stewardshippe they maye receave me into their houses.
5Then called he all his masters detters and sayd vnto ye fyrst: how moche owest thou vnto my master?
16And he put forth a similitude vnto them sayinge: The groude of a certayne riche ma brought forth frutes plenteously
17and he thought in himsilfe sayinge: what shall I do? because I have noo roume where to bestowe my frutes?
18And he sayde: This will I do. I will destroye my barnes and bilde greater and therin will I gadder all my frutes and my goodes:
19and I will saye to my soule: Soule thou hast moch goodes layde vp in stoore for many yeares take thyne ease: eate drinke and be mery.
7Who is it of you yf he had a servaute plowinge or fedinge catell that wolde saye vnto him when he were come from the felde Goo quickly and syt doune to meate:
8and wolde not rather saye to him dresse wherwith I maye sup and gyrde vp thy selfe and serve me tyll I have eaten and dronken: and afterwarde eate thou and drinke thou?
27Then he sayd: I praye the therfore father send him to my fathers housse.
18And he went in to his father saynge: my father And he aswered: here am I who art thou my sonne?
15When one of them that sate at meate also hearde that he sayde vnto him: happy is he that eateth breed in the kyngdome of God.
16Then sayd he to him. A certayne man ordened a greate supper and bade many
28What saye ye to this? A certayne man had two sonnes and came to ye elder and sayde: sonne go and worke to daye in my vineyarde.
29He answered and sayde I will not: but afterwarde repented and went.
1And he sayd also vnto his disciples. Ther was a certayne rych man which had a stewarde that was acused vnto him that he had wasted his goodes.
11Ye and the sonne of man is come to saue that which is lost.
12How thinke ye? Yf a man have an hondred shepe and one of them be gone astray dothe he not leve nynty and nyne in ye moutains and go and seke that one which is gone astray?
13If it happen that he fynd him veryly I say vnto you: he reioyseth more of that shepe then of the nynty and nyne which went not astray.
32Then his LORde called him and sayde vnto him. O evyll servaut I forgave the all that det because thou prayedst me: was it not mete also yt thou
10For the sonne of ma is come to seke and to save that which was looste.
2And when they had eate vp that corne which they brought out of the lande of Egipte their father sayde vnto them: goo agayne and by vs a litle food.
15And it came to passe when he was come agayne and had receaved his kyngdome he comaunded these servautes to be called to him (to whom he gave his money) to witt what every man had done.
21desyringe to be refresshed with the cromes whiche fell from the ryche manes borde. Neverthelesse the dogges came and licked his soores.