It Is Written Reformation 500 Series

Three Angels Broadcasting Network

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Series Code: IIWR

Program Code: IIWR001474A


01:30 ♪[Theme Music]♪
01:40 ♪[Theme Music]♪
01:49 >>John Bradshaw: This is It Is Written.
01:50 I'm John Bradshaw, thanks for joining me for 500.
01:54 Our special series on the reformation.
01:57 Tonight, you and I are gonna see a television program called
01:59 A Lamp Unto My Feet.
02:01 We're focusing especially
02:03 on the life and ministry of one of the great reformers:
02:06 William Tyndale.
02:07 And in a few moments my special guest will be Dr. Dedrick Blue.
02:11 He is the dean of school of religion at Oakwood University
02:14 in Huntsville Alabama.
02:15 Dr. Blue, thanks for joining me.
02:17 >>Dr. Blue: Thank you very much.
02:18 >>John: Tell me something about this man William Tyndale,
02:20 who was he, what he was like?
02:21 >>Dr. Blue: Uh, William Tyndale
02:22 was the great reformer of England.
02:25 As a matter of fact he brought us the English Bible
02:27 that we have today.
02:28 And if it were not for Tyndale,
02:30 I would not be able to read the Bible in my native language.
02:33 So, what a great man of God who sacrificed all
02:36 for the cause of God?
02:37 >>John: Looking forward to speaking more with Dr. Blue
02:38 in just a moment.
02:39 Tyndale, a Bible translator,
02:42 a giant of a man,
02:44 moved by an impulse that he followed
02:47 and in so doing changed the world.
02:51 There are 66 books in the Bible.
02:54 The Bible contains prophecy,
02:56 life sketches,
02:58 historical information.
02:59 The Bible reveals the plan of salvation to you,
03:04 to the world.
03:05 The Bible connects the mind with the heart of God.
03:09 Matter of fact, the Bible became so pervasive in society,
03:14 there are many phrases that we use today
03:16 that you might not even think of the origin
03:18 that originated in the Bible.
03:20 For instance,
03:21 we say something happened by the skin of your teeth.
03:23 Well, that phrase originated in the Bible.
03:26 And ,actually we can thank translators like William Tyndale
03:30 for bringing it into common English usage.
03:34 Can a leopard change its spots?
03:36 That's biblical.
03:37 There is a fly in the ointment, that's found in the Bible.
03:40 The writing on the wall, it's a phrase we use all the time.
03:43 Where did that phrase come from?
03:45 It came right out of the Bible.
03:46 The Bible is an enormous part of life today,
03:49 even for people who don't have faith in God
03:52 and don't profess any sort of belief in the Bible.
03:56 So imagine a world without the Bible.
04:00 Imagine a world. where theres no Word of God,
04:04 even if there is some kind of knowledge about God.
04:09 What would it be like in a world
04:11 where the Bible just doesn't exist?
04:15 Well, I can tell you something about that,
04:16 because that for many years was my world.
04:20 Well, I was raised in a churchgoing family,
04:23 going to church every Sunday, mine was not a biblical faith.
04:29 Now we had a Bible in our home,
04:32 but it wasn't a book we ever read or consulted.
04:35 So I was raised in a world where the Bible just didn't feature.
04:40 Our knowledge of the Bible was woefully inadequate.
04:43 We had misconceptions and false ideas.
04:46 When I say we,
04:47 I'm talking about my family members and I,
04:49 and perhaps the people I consider my friends,
04:52 people, my circle of influence,
04:53 just didn't have a clue.
04:57 And so for me when I discovered the Bible,
05:00 the Bible was freedom.
05:03 The Bible introduced me to a world that
05:05 I didn't know existed.
05:08 Of course, I knew there was a heaven,
05:09 and I knew there was a God,
05:12 but I did not know how I could get forgiveness for my sins.
05:16 I was guilt ridden.
05:19 I went to confession to confess my sins to a priest
05:23 by the time I got home from confession I had sinned
05:27 again and wondered, in fact,
05:30 I despaired knowing I would never be good enough for heaven.
05:35 Let me tell you a story that would help you to illustrate
05:38 what life is like for people who just don't have the Bible.
05:42 Now I go to confession,
05:44 and our home was just five doors down the street from the church.
05:47 I mentioned by the time I got home I would have sinned,
05:49 and so I wondered to myself, what's the point?
05:53 The only time I'm really right with God is the moment
05:58 I leave confession.
05:59 Now, you might be the sort of theologically geared person
06:04 who says, "John, you don't understand it right."
06:07 What I do understand is what my understanding was,
06:10 whether that was right or wrong.
06:13 And I knew that by the time I got home I would sin.
06:16 I knew that.
06:18 Sta-as a young buy,
06:19 nine years old standing out in front of our church,
06:23 on the little grassy strip between the sidewalk,
06:25 the footpath and the road.
06:28 That road was the busiest section of road in the country.
06:33 It was state high way one.
06:36 Everything going north and south went up and down that road,
06:39 long before they put in the bypass you know.
06:42 I remember standing on that grassy strip
06:45 watching the trucks, the semis go by,
06:48 and thinking to myself about the only chance that I've got
06:52 of making it to heaven is if one of those trucks
06:55 runs off the road, runs me over and kills me.
06:59 And I thought to myself,
07:02 wouldn't that be good?
07:04 I'm 9 years old,
07:06 because at least that way I'd die having been forgiven,
07:10 and I could go to heaven.
07:12 Knowing that that would never happen.
07:14 I thought, "What if I threw myself
07:18 under one of those passing trucks?"
07:21 Isn't that a charming thought for a nine year old to have?
07:23 But nine year olds want to go to heaven too,
07:25 nine year olds want to please God.
07:27 And this nine year old didn't know any better.
07:31 Why not?
07:32 Because no one in my sphere ever read the Bible.
07:36 And I certainly couldn't read the Bible,
07:39 wouldn't have known where to start,
07:42 and wasn't encouraged to do so.
07:45 So, when you think about the importance
07:47 of somebody like William Tyndale and the work he did,
07:49 to translate the Bible and get the Bible before people,
07:53 in a time where doing so would ultimately cost him his life,
07:58 you realize that William Tyndale's contribution
08:00 to the world was absolutely enormous.
08:04 So in a couple of moments we are gonna go to Gloucestershire,
08:06 that's the part of the, the, the county in England
08:08 where William Tyndale was born.
08:09 We'll go to little Sudbury, a tiny little village where, uh,
08:13 William Tyndale ministered, uh, for Sir John Walsh and his wife,
08:17 tutoring their children.
08:18 He worked in a little church.
08:20 Now we were at that church,
08:22 filmed right there at the church.
08:24 You'll see it.
08:25 And here is what's interesting,
08:26 it's an historic church, so historic, Tyndale's church,
08:30 and why we were there,
08:31 a couple of American tourists walked by,
08:33 I thought that was odd
08:34 until they told me they were on a walking tour,
08:37 which I think is probably a good way to spend your vacation.
08:40 We got talking and I said to them,
08:42 "Do you know about this church?"
08:43 "Oh no, we don't know a thing, what is it?"
08:45 And I was just amazed,
08:46 I thought surely they are stopping because
08:48 they know it's the William Tyndale church.
08:51 No, they had no idea.
08:53 The man across the street wondered why we were filming
08:57 on that deserted little lane, a sweet little place.
09:02 Why are you filming here?
09:03 Well, we are at the church, the William Tyndale church.
09:05 He said, "William Tyndale?
09:08 Does he have something to do with this place?"
09:11 The man that lived there for years
09:13 and didn't know that one of the greatest figures in history,
09:18 I don't think that's a stretch, had worked in the church,
09:23 just across the street from where he lived.
09:26 We'll take you to a large kind of impressive monument
09:29 to William Tyndale,
09:30 up on a hill overlooking Gloucestershire.
09:33 It's deserted, while we were there,
09:37 two people visited the monument.
09:40 And they were there because as young and in love they were
09:45 just looking for a place to get away from people.
09:49 They in fact didn't go to the monument itself,
09:51 just to the hill on which the monument stood.
09:54 William Tyndale,
09:56 a forgotten giant but he's not gonna be forgotten in 500.
10:00 We'll be back in just a couple of moments
10:02 with A Lamp Unto My Feet.
10:05 ♪[Music]♪
10:13 Now here's a question for you,
10:14 can God be trusted?
10:16 And I have the answer for you?
10:18 Can God be trusted?
10:20 That's our offer today, it's absolutely free to you,
10:23 can God be trusted and can the Bible be trusted?
10:26 Call us on (800) 253 3000
10:29 or visit us online at www.itiswritten.com.
10:35 Or you can write to the address on your screen.
10:37 I'd like you receive our free offer, can God be trusted?
10:43 This is It Is Written, in John Bradshaw,
10:46 thanks for joining me.
10:47 In rural England there stands a monument
10:51 to one of the great heroes of the reformation.
10:55 While he grew up a long way from the center of attention,
10:58 he's remembered as one of the giants of history.
11:03 While others formulated doctrine,
11:05 while others were preaching and teaching,
11:08 this man poured himself into translating and printing
11:13 his legacy is the Bible.
11:23 The Bible, one volume, two divisions,
11:26 the old and the New Testaments.
11:29 It's made up of 66 individual books.
11:32 Some of them are very short, 2nd John has just 13 verses.
11:36 3rd John has one more verse, but fewer words.
11:40 The book of Jude, only 25 verses.
11:44 Some books of the Bible are very long.
11:46 The book of psalms has 150 chapters
11:48 including the Bible's longest chapter psalm 119.
11:54 There are 1,189 chapters in the Bible,
11:58 more than three quarters of a million words.
12:01 It was written by shepherds,
12:03 farmers,
12:03 merchants,
12:04 scholars,
12:05 statesmen and kings,
12:07 the majority of whom had never met each other.
12:10 And the Bible says some pretty remarkable things about itself.
12:14 1 Peter 1:23 says that people are born again
12:19 through the word of God, which lives and abides forever.
12:23 The early Christian's tested the teachings of the apostles
12:26 by the Old Testament.
12:27 Jesus called God's word the truth in John 17:17.
12:33 Psalm 119 verse nine says,
12:36 "How can a young man cleanse his way?
12:39 By taking heed according to Your word."
12:42 Same chapter verse 130,
12:44 the entrance of Your words gives light.
12:48 It gives understanding to the simple.
12:52 And David said on the 105th verse of the same psalm,
12:56 "Thy word is A lamp unto my feet.
12:59 And a light under my path."
13:02 So if this is true, that the Bible is the truth,
13:07 that it cleanses,
13:08 that people are born again by it,
13:10 that it's a lamp and a light.
13:12 If that's true, then imagine a world with no Bible.
13:17 It's not that hard to imagine.
13:23 Back in Jesus day, the scriptures, and remember,
13:26 in Christ's day they only had the Old Testament scriptures,
13:29 back then the scriptures formed the framework
13:33 or the basis for society.
13:35 The word of God was widely taught,
13:37 and people had a good working knowledge
13:40 of what we today would recognize as the first
13:43 39 books of the Bible, the Old Testament.
13:47 But several hundred years after
13:49 the founding of the Christian church, by people such as
13:52 Peter and James and John,
13:54 non-biblical traditions and teachings
13:56 started to seep into christianity.
14:00 Some of the plainest teachings of the Bible were ignored.
14:04 If the entrance of God's word gives light,
14:08 then the obscuring of God's word
14:10 led to a period of some real spiritual darkness.
14:16 How did it happen?
14:17 In the 4th century AD, the Roman emperor Constantine,
14:22 Constantine the great, he became known as,
14:24 converted to christianity.
14:27 It was a nominal conversion
14:29 and Constantine never really abandoned paganism.
14:33 As a result, a number of pagan practices
14:36 became established within the Christian faith.
14:41 For example, the early Christians
14:43 practiced baptism by immersion,
14:46 but over time, infant baptism found its way into the church.
14:50 The venerating of relics was certainly not practiced by
14:52 the early Christians, but that too found its way
14:55 into Christianity shortly after Constantine was baptized.
14:58 The early Christians did not confess their sins to a priest,
15:03 but that found its way into church practice as well.
15:06 Now, there were some Christians who clung to the Bible
15:11 as their rule of faith and practice,
15:14 but over time the church began to drift more and more
15:19 away from the word of God.
15:23 Now come down to the 16th century,
15:25 by this time, the ruling church had been in power
15:28 for more than a 1,000 years,
15:30 and many non-biblical practices had become deeply entrenched,
15:35 worse than that, the Bible itself had become
15:39 virtually inaccessible to the vast majority of the people.
15:43 In many places, the Bible was banned.
15:46 People were forbidden to read it or to possess it.
15:50 Here in England in Coventry,
15:52 a dozen people became known as the Coventry Martyrs
15:55 after they lost their lives, they were executed,
15:58 because it was known that they disagreed
15:59 with some of the practices of the established church.
16:02 One of them was a woman who was found to have in her possession
16:06 a handwritten copy of the Lord's prayer,
16:09 The Ten Commandments and the Apostles' Creed.
16:12 She was burned at the stake for that.
16:16 There are hundreds of stories just like it, thousands even.
16:21 After centuries of drifting from the Bible,
16:24 the Word of God was out of the reach of the people.
16:28 The darkness that existed was almost palpable,
16:32 but here in England heroes stood tall,
16:35 who would cause the light of the Bible to shine again.
16:44 John Wycliffe who was born in around 1328,
16:47 became known as the morning star of the reformation.
16:51 In the 14th century the peasant class were essentially slaves,
16:54 and the influence of the ruling church was enormous.
16:58 The catholic church essentially controlled the country
17:02 and by later in the 14th century,
17:04 the pope was receiving five times as much
17:07 gold from the government of
17:09 England as was the king.
17:12 And when it came to the teaching of God's word,
17:14 the people were living in superstition and fear
17:17 as priests as well as traveling monks and Friars
17:20 kept the people in spiritual darkness.
17:24 It was a common practice for the monks
17:26 to sell forgiveness of sin.
17:28 They would live in luxury,
17:30 fleecing the flock instead of feeding the flock.
17:33 The people were kept in darkness by monks
17:36 who were barely less ignorant of the scriptures than they were.
17:39 In 1365 pope Urban the 5th
17:42 demanded that England submit entirely to the authority
17:46 of the church of Rome,
17:47 which would have been an admission on England's part
17:50 that the pope was the legitimate sovereign of England,
17:55 as he lay on what people thought was his death bed,
17:58 the monks urged Wycliffe to recant the things that he
18:01 had said in opposition to them and the church,
18:04 but instead Wycliffe propped himself up and said,
18:07 "I will not die,
18:09 but live and declare the evil deeds of the Friars.
18:13 What Wycliffe went on to do was to translate the Bible
18:19 into the English language of the day.
18:21 At Wycliffe's third trial,
18:24 he met his accusers with these words,
18:26 "With whom think you are you contending,
18:29 with an old man on the brink of the grave?
18:32 No, with truth, truth which is stronger than you,
18:37 and will overcome you."
18:39 Wycliffe was hated by the church.
18:41 After his death, his books were burned
18:45 and even his body was exhumed and burned
18:47 and his ashes were cast into the River Swift near Lutterworth.
18:51 His followers were persecuted,
18:53 and it was enshrined in law that to translate the Bible
18:57 into English without a license was a punishable crime.
19:02 110 years after Wycliffe's death,
19:05 another man came on the scene,
19:06 another Bible translator,
19:09 when William Tyndale was born in 1494,
19:12 superstition controlled people's lives,
19:15 kings could sentence people to death for petty reasons,
19:18 popes could issue decrees that had no basis in scripture,
19:23 and yet people accepted that as the will of God for their lives,
19:26 without the Bible they couldn't know
19:27 whether the church was right or wrong.
19:31 As Hosea 4 verse 6 says,
19:33 “My people are destroyed for lack of knowledge.”
19:37 By the time William Tyndale was born,
19:39 John Wycliffe's translation of the Bible was out of date,
19:41 because the English language had changed substantially.
19:46 Wycliffe and his followers had been known as Bible men.
19:50 100 plus years later,
19:52 another Bible man was needed.
19:56 Back with more in a moment.
19:57 ♪[Music]♪
20:05 Now here is a question for you,
20:06 can God be trusted?
20:08 And I have the answer for you.
20:10 Can God be trusted?
20:12 That's our offer today it's absolutely free to you.
20:15 Can God be trusted and can the Bible be trusted?
20:18 Call us on (800) 253 3000
20:21 or visit us online at www.itiswritten.com,
20:27 or you can write to the address on your screen.
20:29 I'd like you to receive our free offer,
20:32 can God be trusted?
20:34 ♪[Music]♪
20:43 >>John: Thanks for joining me today on It Is Written.
20:46 William Tyndale was born in Gloucestershire England
20:48 in around the year 1494.
20:51 His family moved here during the wars of the roses.
20:54 A series of wars for control of the English throne
20:56 between the house of York and the house of Lancaster.
21:00 Tyndale was educated at Hartford college in oxford,
21:04 and earned a master's degree in theology in 1515.
21:08 He was fluent in eight languages,
21:11 including Hebrew and Greek,
21:14 the languages in which the Bible was originally written.
21:18 In 1521, he moved here to the little village of Little Sudbury
21:23 where he became the chaplain in the home of Sir John Walsh.
21:27 In fact, this church is built from the actual stones,
21:31 and according to the plan of the church,
21:34 Tyndale ministered in when he lived right here.
21:38 He had a deep respect for the Bible,
21:39 much like that which Martin Luther had.
21:42 And it wasn't long, and that respect for the word of God
21:46 got Tyndale in a lot of trouble.
21:49 John Fox, the author of the famous Fox's book of martyrs
21:54 reported on a conversation William Tyndale had.
21:58 Someone said to him,
21:59 “We had better be without God's laws, than the pope's.”
22:03 Tyndale replied,
22:04 “I defy the pope and all his laws.
22:07 And if God spares my life ere many years
22:10 I will cause the boy that driveth the plow
22:13 to know more of the scriptures than thou doest.”
22:17 It was here in Little Sudbury that William Tyndale
22:20 felt the call to translate the Bible into English.
22:24 So he left here the following year for London
22:26 to get the support he needed.
22:28 He was looking for the blessing of a certain bishop,
22:31 a man who had praised the work of a dutch theologian Erasmus.
22:35 When Erasmus translated the New Testament,
22:38 but Tyndale didn't get the support he needed.
22:43 Convinced the people of England needed the Bible
22:45 in their own language,
22:47 Tyndale left England in 1524 for Europe,
22:51 and made his way to Wittenberg where Martin Luther was living.
22:56 Luther had translated the New Testament into German
22:59 a couple of years before.
23:01 And now Tyndale set about working on a translation
23:04 of the Bible that would impact Christianity in Great Britain
23:09 and around the world.
23:11 He was helped by a priest named William Roy.
23:14 And within a year or two the translation was finished.
23:18 After some challenges owing to the opposition
23:21 Luther was facing,
23:22 Tyndale had translated the New Testament into English.
23:26 He had the printing done in Worms,
23:28 the city where Martin Luther's trial,
23:30 before emperor Charles V was held.
23:33 More copies were printed
23:34 in what was then the dutch city of Antwerp.
23:37 And in the months that followed,
23:39 those Bibles were smuggled into England and Scotland.
23:43 But smuggling an English language version of the Bible
23:46 across the English channel wasn't an easy matter.
23:50 That bishop who refused his permission to Tyndale
23:53 to translate the Bible into English back then,
23:56 he stood up a lot of opposition to the project.
23:58 In fact, he commanded that Tyndale's Bible be burned.
24:03 Booksellers were banned from selling the book.
24:06 Now burning the Bible in public,
24:07 what that did was generate a lot of sympathy
24:10 for the whole project,
24:12 even among supporters of church and state.
24:15 People didn't like to see the Bible treated in that way,
24:18 burned in the streets.
24:19 Here's what one historian said,
24:21 “The spectacle of the scriptures being put the torch
24:24 provoked controversy even amongst the faithful.”
24:28 But there was worse to come.
24:31 In January of 1529, the catholic cardinal Thomas Wolsey
24:36 condemned Tyndale as a hieratic.
24:39 This attracted the attention of England's King Henry VIII
24:42 who acted swiftly against this new reformer.
24:46 Henry was even more upset with Tyndale,
24:48 because of Tyndale's public disagreement with
24:50 Henry's intention to divorce his wife Catherine of Aragon,
24:54 so that he could marry Anne Boleyn.
24:59 Tyndale contained
25:00 that that Henry VIII's divorce lacked biblical support.
25:04 Henry wasn't open to constructive criticism,
25:06 but fortunately for Tyndale he was in the Netherlands
25:09 and Henry couldn't touch him there.
25:12 He continued to speak out,
25:14 not only about Henry VIII's morals,
25:16 but also about the teachings of the Bible as his writings
25:19 would spread news about his convictions spread also.
25:24 Like Luther, Tyndale maintained that the Bible
25:27 should be the supreme authority
25:29 in matters of faith and practice.
25:32 He also believed strongly in the Bible teaching
25:34 of justification by faith.
25:36 He did not believe that people should
25:38 confess their sins to others.
25:41 And like Luther, he also didn't believe the popular teaching
25:44 that when people die they go straight to heaven or hell.
25:48 Like the other protestant reformers,
25:50 it was Tyndale's purpose to direct men and women
25:53 to the Bible as the rule of faith and practice.
25:56 And even though the protestant reformers didn't always agree
25:59 with each other on any number of subjects,
26:02 what they did do was lift up the Bible as supreme,
26:06 helping believers move towards a clearer understanding
26:10 of God's truth.
26:11 William Tyndale's scholarship had a profound influence
26:15 on the translation of the King James version of the Bible,
26:18 as well as the English language itself.
26:21 Translation of the King James began in 1604
26:24 by order of James 1st, king of England,
26:27 and it was completed in 1611.
26:29 It's estimated that 83% of the New Testament
26:33 and 76% of the Old Testament in the King James comes to us
26:38 from William Tyndale,
26:40 Passover, scapegoat, my brother's keeper,
26:44 the salt of the earth.
26:45 It came to pass.
26:47 The signs of the times,
26:49 let there be light,
26:50 a law unto themselves,
26:52 and much more is the result of Tyndale's scholarship.
26:56 Now, ultimately, Tyndale would meet the same fate
27:00 as the Oxford Martyrs,
27:02 Cranmer, Ridley, and Latimer who were burned at the stake
27:06 right here by the Roman church, 20 years after Tyndale died.
27:12 But before Tyndale was put to death,
27:14 he prayed a prayer that would change the world,
27:18 that's coming next.
27:19 ♪[Music]♪
27:26 [Cricketts chirping]
27:30 ♪[Music]♪
27:38 [Camera equipment rattling]
27:41 [Rustling in bushes]
27:43 [People talking]
27:45 [Wind blowing]
27:53 ♪[Music]♪
28:03 ♪[Music]♪
28:10 [Cheering]
28:19 ♪[Music]♪
28:36 Thanks for joining me on It Is Written.
28:39 In Vilvoorde Belgium,
28:41 on the northern side of the capital city of Belgium Brussels
28:45 is a museum dedicated to the
28:47 life and ministry of William Tyndale.
28:50 It's situated here,
28:52 because this location is only yards from the very spot
28:56 where William Tyndale was executed.
28:59 It might not look like much of anything today,
29:01 but if you'd been here 500 years ago,
29:04 you'd have seen a castle standing on this spot
29:07 right behind me.
29:08 The Senne River just over here runs between Antwerp
29:11 and Brussels making Vilvoorde
29:13 a place of real strategic importance.
29:16 That castle was of a line of fortifications
29:19 and William Tyndale who'd been betrayed
29:21 to the holy Roman empire was kept as a prisoner
29:24 for more than a year in the castle right on this spot.
29:28 Eventually he was brought out and executed right here.
29:32 Before he was put to death, Tyndale prayed one last prayer.
29:37 He said, "Lord, open the king of England's eyes."
29:41 His prayer was answered.
29:44 Within four years of his death,
29:46 four English translations of the bible
29:48 had been published,
29:49 all at the behest of king Henry VIII,
29:52 and all of them based on the work of William Tyndale.
29:58 I've come here to this museum to speak to the experts
30:02 on the life of William Tyndale.
30:04 Why was Tyndale held here in Vilvoorde,
30:08 why here of all places?
30:09 >>Speaker 3: Here in Vilvoorde there was a castle,
30:12 and in that castle there was not so many people,
30:16 so there they know if we put him in Vilvoorde,
30:21 he can, he will stay in prison.
30:24 >>John: What do you think conditions were like
30:27 inside the castle prison?
30:28 >>Speaker 3: Uh, as prisons in the 16th, very difficult.
30:32 We know by his last written letter
30:35 that we have in archives that he asked on the authorities
30:41 to have warm clothes,
30:43 to become candles and to become his work,
30:47 his translation work for having the time now in prison
30:53 and he stayed there for the time he had to stay,
30:57 and hoping that he wouldn't escaped,
30:59 they killed him.
31:01 >>John: So why was the church so opposed to Tyndale
31:05 translating the Bible?
31:07 >>Speaker 3: It's, a, a, a way to eliminate all critical
31:13 actions and reactions in church.
31:16 If you have, uh, uh, uh, your people,
31:21 who can criticize your own way to live as church,
31:27 it's very difficult to stay as church.
31:32 They want to keep their own power,
31:38 and don't give the opportunity on all people to understand
31:45 what was the word God's and not the word of the church.
31:50 >>John: Explain for me William Tyndale's
31:54 contribution to the reformation.
31:58 >>Speaker 3: He was the man who,
32:00 uh, who worked on the English speaking people.
32:04 And it's very important because we had a German translator,
32:08 we had a French translator,
32:09 we had still a Swiss translator.
32:12 We had several translators who makes the new world,
32:16 that's very important to know, because we have still, uh,
32:21 in Europe a big difference between the Latin part
32:26 and the non-Latin part.
32:28 So, the English contribution of William Tyndale
32:31 is not only a contribution in let's say
32:35 the English speaking part of Europe,
32:37 but always contribution on the new world,
32:42 because we would travel from this country to the states,
32:48 and making in states also the new world
32:52 with a own translation.
32:57 And it's very important to know that the new American version
33:03 is the most important translation with the biggest
33:10 part of William Tyndale in it.
33:12 ♪[Music]♪
33:17 >>John: Few people have had so great an impact
33:20 upon the religious faith,
33:21 the cultural heritage,
33:23 even the vocabulary of the English speaking world,
33:27 as William Tyndale.
33:28 Britons voted him 26th
33:31 in the list of the 100 Greatest Britons of all Time.
33:35 And few prayers have been answered as dramatically
33:38 as that prayer Tyndale prayed in the final moments of his life
33:42 when Henry VIII granted permission for the Bible
33:45 to be published in English.
33:47 It unleashed the Bible upon the English speaking world.
33:51 And as a result, the world would never be the same again.
33:56 The core principle of the reformation
33:58 was the role of the word of God in a believer's life.
34:02 Notice, that William Tyndale
34:04 translated the bible into the English
34:06 not long after Johannes Gutenberg
34:08 gave to us the modern printing press,
34:11 which meant the word of God could be distributed to people
34:15 who could read it for themselves,
34:17 understand it for themselves,
34:18 and then follow the leading of the holy spirit in their lives.
34:24 Tyndale's contribution to the reformation was enormous.
34:28 It's one thing to teach or to preach or to write
34:31 as other reformers did.
34:33 It's another thing all together to actually
34:35 give people the Word of God.
34:38 And that's what William Tyndale accomplished.
34:41 Though he's been gone 500 years,
34:44 his influence and his impact lives on in the lives of people
34:47 who continue to be transformed by the power of the Holy Bible.
34:52 ♪[Music]♪
34:59 >>John: I'm John Bradshaw from It Is Written,
35:02 inviting you to join me for 500,
35:05 nine programs produced by it Is Written
35:08 taking you deep into the Reformation.
35:11 This is the 500th anniversary of the beginning of the Reformation
35:15 when Martin Luther nailed his 95 theses to the door
35:18 of the Castle church in Wittenburg, Germany.
35:20 We'll take you to Wittenburg, and to Belgium,
35:22 to England,
35:23 to Ireland,
35:25 to Rome,
35:26 to the Vatican City,
35:27 and introduce you to the people who created the Reformation,
35:30 who pushed the Reformation forward.
35:32 We'll take you to sites all throughout Europe
35:34 where the reformers lived and, in some cases, died.
35:37 We'll bring you back to the United States
35:38 and take you to a little farm in upstate New York,
35:41 and show you how God spread the Reformation here.
35:44 Don't miss 500.
35:46 You can own the 500 series on DVD.
35:49 Call us on 888-664-5573,
35:54 or visit us online at itiswritten.shop.
36:00 Welcome back to 500,
36:02 I'm John Bradshaw from It Is Written.
36:04 And my special guest is the dean of the school of religion
36:07 at Oakwood University in Huntsville Alabama
36:09 Dr. Dedrick Blue.
36:11 Dr. Blue, thanks for joining me.
36:12 >>Dr. Blue: It's a pleasure to be here with you today John.
36:14 >>John: William Tyndale, tell me,
36:15 tell me something about the man.
36:17 >>Dr. Blue: Well, William Tyndale was one of the greatest
36:21 reformers of the protestant reformation,
36:23 and was so instrumental really in unlocking
36:27 people's understanding of the Bible
36:29 particularly in the English language,
36:30 but the implications of what he did are still
36:33 reverberating around the world to this day.
36:35 >>John: It seems to me that people like Tyndale,
36:37 he wasn't the only translator,
36:38 but seems to me they don't get enough,
36:40 enough credit for what they did, the, the,
36:42 the reformation was all about getting the word of God
36:45 into the hands and hearts, and minds of the people.
36:47 >>Dr. Blue: Oh yeah.
36:48 >>John: That's what he dedicated his life to doing.
36:49 >>Dr. Blue: Oh absolutely.
36:50 I mean, if you stop and think about the time
36:51 which Tyndale was born, uh, around 1494, right?
36:57 Things were beginning to transpire in the world
37:00 that were radically different.
37:01 For example, the fall of Constantinople
37:04 opened up the world to having the Bible in their hands
37:09 in the Greek language,
37:11 which really inspired, a great, great, um,
37:14 Bible translator by the name of Erasmus,
37:17 to take this Greek Bible
37:18 and begin to make it available throughout Europe.
37:22 So for the very first time in centuries,
37:25 people were able to pick up the Word of God
37:27 and begin to look at it, and begin to grap with it,
37:30 and scholars could actually read it for themselves.
37:33 >>John: Now not that the English language is anymore important
37:36 than any other language,
37:36 but wasn't yet available in English.
37:39 It was not an easy matter for Tyndale
37:42 just to go and translate the Bible.
37:43 If you and I wanted to translate the Bible,
37:44 people would cheer us on,
37:46 we could start a, a, a go fund me page,
37:48 folks would help us out.
37:50 >>Dr. Blue: Yes.
37:51 >>John: Then it was different,
37:52 what was the age like in which Tyndale found himself.
37:55 I mean, I mean society and so forth.
37:57 >>Dr. Blue: Well, in society, most, most people were,
38:00 were in absolute object poverty.
38:03 They were, uh, serfs, serving lords and serving kings.
38:07 There was prolific ignorance in the land,
38:10 and in addition to that, the, um,
38:12 most of population was actually illiterate,
38:15 and the only literati were really the priest.
38:19 And, and the priest, uh, would study for years and years,
38:23 uh, philosophy, languages and all these things.
38:26 And then finally after they came to a point of understanding
38:29 they were allowed, at some point after eight,
38:32 nine, 10 years of study to to, to, to see the sacred scripture.
38:35 So, people at that time were, were left in ignorance,
38:39 the church pretty much dictated their lives,
38:42 dictated how they were to respond
38:45 and to perceive the world.
38:46 And so all of a sudden someone comes along and says,
38:50 "Listen, now there is a world that God has for you.
38:54 That is found in the sacred pages.
38:57 If you could only have access to them
38:59 and read them for yourselves,
39:01 you would come to understand the God that I know
39:03 and the God that I have loved.
39:06 >>John: Tyndale has this idea that he wants to, to,
39:08 to translate the Bible,
39:09 what, what, what moved him in that direction?
39:11 Why in the world would a man
39:12 want to do such a thing back then?
39:14 >>Dr. Blue: Well, I think that Tyndale was greatly inspired
39:18 by a previous Bible translator Erasmus
39:21 who we mentioned just a moment ago
39:23 who had began to take the, the, the Greek version of the Bible
39:26 and began to do some work in translation there.
39:28 He was also greatly inspired by Martin Luther,
39:31 and the reformation that was taking place in Europe.
39:34 You know Martin Luther began to, to, uh, read the Bible
39:36 and discover this great biblical truth,
39:39 righteous just by faith, justification by faith,
39:43 you know, saved by grace.
39:44 And these kinds of ideas greatly inspired Tyndale.
39:48 And so Tyndale being, um, uh, an interesting man
39:52 at a quite young age, he actually began his studies.
39:54 So he's born in 1494, by, by 1512
39:59 he's already well deep into his studies,
40:02 mastering so many different languages.
40:04 He was a, he was a gifted linguist,
40:06 being able to speak French, and uh, Latin,
40:09 and read Greek and read Hebrew, and so many,
40:12 all, all these languages, right?
40:14 Seven or eight languages this man mastered.
40:16 And so, as he was beginning to read he said to himself,
40:19 wait a minute, "It seems to me that the greatest thing that
40:23 people need in their life is not the traditions
40:26 and the ceremonies
40:27 of a church for their soul salvation,
40:29 but there is something else that God wants us to know
40:32 and come to understand, and is found within the Word of God.
40:35 And if I could just have the opportunity to translate this
40:39 and get it to the people in their own language,
40:42 then they could come to an understanding of what God
40:45 really has in store for them."
40:46 >>John: You mentioned something a moment ago
40:48 and this really reminds me to understand the reformation
40:53 you've got to take yourself there, uh, as it were,
40:56 look around, see the sites, listen to what's going on.
41:00 >>Dr. Blue: Mm-hmm.
41:01 >>John: Immerse yourself in that, in that time.
41:03 You talked about people were dealing with excommunication
41:06 and death.
41:07 You go to greyfriars church yard or,
41:09 stone throw from there, the monuments in Edinburgh Scotland
41:12 to people were martyred just up at St Andrews,
41:16 people were martyred there,
41:18 you go to Oxford, and they have the great big monuments
41:20 to people who were martyred.
41:22 >>Dr. Blue: Absolutely, absolutely.
41:23 >>John: So, so people were, were dealing with this.
41:25 This was, uh, obedience to the church,
41:27 was a matter of life and death.
41:29 >>Dr. Blue: It certainly was, and we also know there was,
41:32 uh, just around that time that the inquisition
41:35 was in full force, um, in, in Europe.
41:38 And you are absolutely right, there were,
41:39 there were a great number of people who were martyred
41:41 for their, for their faith or their belief or their, uh,
41:44 failure to submit themselves to the authority
41:49 of the church of Rome.
41:50 >>John: So what kind of man does this make Tyndale?
41:52 I don't want to get to the end of the story
41:54 before we get to the end of the story,
41:55 but he wants to translate the Bible.
41:57 I mentioned, you and I we could, we could start today
42:01 and people would cheer us on,
42:03 what did Tyndale have to go through?
42:05 And then I'll get to my next question?
42:06 >>Dr. Blue: Well, when Tyndale wanted to translate the Bible,
42:08 you know, he went to, he went to the presiding bishop
42:12 and asked for permission.
42:13 And he was denied.
42:15 And so the only way that Tyndale could pursue, um,
42:18 this translation is that he had to leave England
42:22 in order to be able to do it.
42:23 >>John: You said the bishop denied him permission,
42:25 what do you think motivated the bishop to say,
42:27 "No, you just cannot do that?"
42:29 >>Dr. Blue: Well, it's hard for me to be able to get
42:30 into the bishop's mind (laughs).
42:32 But if we go back and take a look at the times in which we,
42:35 in which they were living,
42:37 fealty to the church was absolute.
42:40 Um, and so perhaps the bishop out of fear and perhaps
42:45 the bishop out of his own sense of loyalty to the church
42:48 did not want to see the church disrupted.
42:50 There is, there is always people along the way who,
42:52 who maintain the status quo thinking that
42:56 in the maintenance of the status quo,
42:58 that we are not throwing the whole baby out
43:01 with the bath water.
43:02 >>John: You'd think that bishop might have seen
43:04 the writing on the wall, you'd think he might have thought,
43:05 boy if he translates the Bible, and this gets out,
43:08 this could, this could upset the apple cart.
43:10 >>Dr. Blue: Well, it was clear that if the Bible
43:13 were translated and got out, especially when,
43:16 when later reads how Tyndale did some of his translations,
43:21 it was a direct assault to the authority of the priesthood.
43:24 >>John: There was no Bible.
43:25 Wycliffe the morning star of the reformation,
43:27 he'd translated the Bible into English some years before,
43:30 couple of 100, 150 years so before,
43:32 uh, but by now that English was archaic.
43:35 >>Dr. Blue: Right.
43:36 >>John: There was no English Bible.
43:37 >>Dr. Blue: That's right.
43:38 >>John: So it was gonna change things.
43:39 Here is the question I was gonna ask you a moment ago.
43:42 Tyndale looking ahead, he, he,
43:44 he knows that what he's thinking about doing is radical.
43:48 >>Dr. Blue: Mm-hmm.
43:49 >>John: He knows this is radical.
43:51 He maybe motivated by the,
43:52 by the purest motives although he knew that he was
43:54 gonna come to conflict with the church along the way.
43:57 He looks down into the future, he's got to have some idea,
44:04 when the bishop says no,
44:05 but he refuses to take no for an answer.
44:09 He's got to have some idea of where this might end up for him.
44:14 >>Dr. Blue: Yeah, yeah, yeah.
44:15 >>John: So help me understand the mind of someone
44:17 living under the direct authority
44:19 of an absolute monarch,
44:21 the direct authority of an absolute pope,
44:24 in a system that's, uh, pretty rigid, pretty strict.
44:30 He's staying, I got to do this,
44:32 what drives that man?
44:34 >>Dr. Blue: I think it's the same thing that drove,
44:37 um, the apostle Paul, you know.
44:40 The apostle Paul says, you know, "I'm crucified with Christ,
44:43 yet not I, but Christ lives in me."
44:44 It's the same motivation that, that motivated Jesus who said,
44:49 not my will but thy will be done.
44:51 It's the same motivation that has motivated the men
44:54 and women of God down through the ages,
44:56 who knew that although there may be a king, a premiere,
44:59 a prime minister or a president,
45:01 that we answer to a higher authority.
45:04 It's like when the apostles emerged out of the prison
45:06 and said, we must obey God rather than man.
45:09 There is something that motivates the child of God
45:11 when they understand that there is authority
45:13 that is above all other authorities,
45:15 that yes there may be a king,
45:17 but there was the king of kings and Lord of lords.
45:19 And yes, there may be a priest,
45:21 but there was a high priest in heaven who sits
45:24 at the right hand of the throne of God,
45:26 Jesus Christ the righteous.
45:27 And I think when you get a hold of that,
45:29 that changes the way in which you view the world.
45:32 Your life becomes less important, and turn, in, in, in,
45:37 in the grand scheme of things,
45:39 because I now live to glorify Him.
45:41 And I think that motivated Tyndale.
45:43 >>John: Outstanding.
45:44 We'll be back with more in a moment
45:45 I'm with Dr. Dedrick Blue, uh, dean of the school of religion
45:48 at Oakwood University.
45:49 More on William Tyndale in just a moment.
45:52 ♪[Music]♪
45:59 Now here is a question for you,
46:01 can God be trusted?
46:02 And I have the answer for you.
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46:09 can God be trusted and can the Bible be trusted?
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46:23 I'd like you receive our free offer,
46:26 can God be trusted?
46:29 Thanks for joining us on 500
46:31 brought to you by It Is Written.
46:32 My guest is Dr. Dedrick Blue,
46:34 the dean of the school of religion at Oakwood University
46:37 in Huntsville Alabama.
46:38 We're discussing William Tyndale,
46:40 one of the great reformers, who uh, maybe just for reviews sake,
46:46 found himself living and operating
46:48 in pretty difficult circumstances.
46:49 This wasn't the 21st century in the United States.
46:53 >>John: This was then, 500 years ago,
46:56 in an, in an environment where there was an absolute king.
47:00 >>Dr. Blue: Mm-hmm.
47:01 >>John: And an absolute pope, and Tyndale was told
47:03 he absolutely had to do what he had to do,
47:06 but something got a hold of him and he's like,
47:08 "I've got to translate the Bible."
47:10 How do you feel in your, in your study of William Tyndale
47:13 that Tyndale believed, what was his vision?
47:19 I get the Bible translated into English,
47:21 the end result of this is going to be...
47:26 what was he presupposing?
47:28 >>Dr. Blue: I think he was presupposing, um,
47:30 the end of tradition and the emergence
47:35 of a true kingdom of God.
47:37 So for example, one thing that, that, that Tyndale does
47:40 in his translation, instead of using the word priest,
47:45 he uses the word overseer.
47:47 You see, because he did not want to give people any impression
47:51 that there was a priestly class.
47:53 Another thing that he does in his translation
47:55 when he translates Ekklesia, the called out ones, right,
48:00 he translates it congregation,
48:02 rather than translating it as church.
48:05 And he did that particularly because congregation implies
48:08 that the people
48:09 are somehow making up this, this, this kingdom of God,
48:13 engaged in dialogue with God,
48:15 rather than through a structured authority of the church.
48:18 >>John: He was angling for change.
48:19 >>Dr. Blue: He was angling for change.
48:21 And that change was to say,
48:23 "Hey, people, the word of God is here, you can read it.
48:26 And God wants you to be His people."
48:28 That the church is not an institution,
48:30 the church is people who come together,
48:32 who worship God in spirit and truth."
48:34 >>John: So to put it another way, Tyndale translated,
48:37 I could, I could perhps, it might sound negative,
48:40 translated the Bible with an agenda,
48:42 but let me put it in a positive sense, with a vision?
48:45 >>Dr. Blue: Yes.
48:46 >>John: He saw did he?
48:47 This wasn't just I'll translate the Bible
48:49 and let this go where it goes.
48:51 He had a vision for what the Bible could do in the church
48:54 and in the lives of people.
48:55 >>Dr. Blue: Right, right.
48:56 >>John: Well, let's talk about the translating,
48:57 I think many people would be surprised to know
48:59 just how influential Tyndale's translations have been.
49:03 How have affected us down through the years,
49:05 what do we know today of Tyndale's translating?
49:07 >>Dr. Blue: Well, you know, um, uh, some scholars
49:09 have estimated that about 83% of the New Testament,
49:14 and about, uh, 76% of the Old Testament,
49:17 are Tyndale's translations.
49:18 The, the authorized version, the King James version,
49:21 there was 54 scholars get together
49:23 and they decided they were gonna grapple and translate the Bible.
49:26 Well, they borrowed most of that from Tyndale,
49:29 because they couldn't improve upon what Tyndale said.
49:31 Not only that, when you read Tyndale's translations,
49:34 we still hold onto some of the beauty of his language
49:37 to this day.
49:38 You see it was Tyndale who wrote the words
49:40 seek and you shall find.
49:41 >>John: Right.
49:43 >>Dr. Blue: Knock and the door shall be opened unto you.
49:44 Judge not that you be not judged,
49:46 you are the salt of the earth.
49:48 It was Tyndale's translation that says,
49:49 in Him we live and move and have our being.
49:53 Isn't that beautiful?
49:54 >>John: That is beautiful.
49:54 >>Dr. Blue: You know-
49:55 >>John: That's powerful too.
49:56 >>Dr. Blue: Yes, it's very, very powerful.
49:57 So the language that Tyndale used was poetic,
50:02 and elevating, and challenging,
50:06 and inspiring all at the same time.
50:09 >>John: Luther when he translated the Bible into German
50:11 altered the German language.
50:13 >>Dr. Blue: Mm-hmm, yes.
50:14 >>John: And really his work with, with the German language
50:16 changed the way the language was used.
50:18 >>Dr. Blue: Absolutely.
50:19 >>John: So Tyndale as he was translating,
50:20 I, I, I, I suppose most translators,
50:22 when he was translating then and bringing the Bible into English,
50:26 it's evident that he stopped and thought and prayed,
50:29 and chose very carefully words that he believed would,
50:32 would truly the human heart.
50:33 He achieved that, didn't he?
50:35 >>Dr. Blue: Yes he did.
50:35 He absolutely did.
50:36 Um, I'll give you another example
50:38 of a Tyndale translation.
50:39 You know, the word that we have now for passover, right?
50:43 Um, that word didn't exist.
50:44 That was Tyndale,
50:45 Tyndale added that word to our Lexicon passover,
50:47 because before everybody was using the, the Hebrew word.
50:51 But just think about the beauty of, of that word, passover.
50:54 >>John: Sure.
50:55 >>Dr. Blue: You know, the angel passes over.
50:57 >>John: That's right.
50:58 >>Dr. Blue: I mean, I mean Tyndale was absolutely, uh,
51:00 a wonderful and masterful...
51:01 matter of fact, one of his translations says,
51:04 uh, the spirit is, is willing but the flesh is weak.
51:08 Well you know, um, when you read others translations,
51:10 Luther's translations, it says, Luther says,
51:13 the spirit is willing but the flesh is sick.
51:16 >>John: Uuh.
51:17 >>Dr. Blue: You know, but Tyndale
51:19 the spirit is willing but we are weak.
51:22 You know, and so in that translation
51:25 I'm willing but I'm weak,
51:26 it points me back to the source of my strength.
51:28 >>John: Sure.
51:29 >>Dr. Blue: The source of my strength in Jesus Christ,
51:30 he's my Lord and savior.
51:31 So I love what Tyndale did with language,
51:35 and I love how that language, uh,
51:37 throughout the centuries still resonates with Christians today.
51:41 >>John: Tyndale had to leave England
51:43 in order to get this job done.
51:44 The priest, uh, the bishop said no.
51:46 >>Dr. Blue: Yes.
51:46 >>John: Off he went.
51:47 So, so what happened then?
51:49 He's essentially in exile, how did he,
51:51 how did he go about translating a Bible
51:53 into English 500 years ago.
51:55 >>Dr. Blue: Well, he found himself in Wittenberg
51:57 and he found himself in Worms, and he found himself in Antwerp,
52:00 um, all along the way doing bits and pieces of translation.
52:04 Um, when he first, uh, began to publish a portion
52:07 of that New Testament and get it out, um,
52:10 and some of the copies finally made its way back to England.
52:13 You know, those copies were seized and burned and,
52:16 you know, he was, you know, railed as a hieratic.
52:20 But what really got Tyndale in trouble, um,
52:22 apart from his translations was some of his writings.
52:27 So for example,
52:28 when he wrote a book called The Obedience of Man, right?
52:32 In that he rails against the, the traditions of the church.
52:35 And then he wrote another book called The Practice of Prelates.
52:38 And that really got him into trouble with king Henry VIII.
52:41 >>John: Yeah, what did he talk about there
52:42 that fired up the king so much?
52:43 >>Dr. Blue: Well, you know king Henry the VIII
52:46 has gone down the history as, as quite an amorous king.
52:49 >>John: Sure.
52:49 >>Dr. Blue: Right?
52:50 And, uh, he was married at the time to Catherine of, Aragon,
52:55 but he wanted the pope to give him an annulment,
52:58 and the pope refused to give him an annulment,
53:00 uh, so that he could marry Ann Boleyn.
53:02 Um, and so at that time, as Tyndale was watching this,
53:07 Tyndale begins to rail against the king for his amorous ways,
53:13 and, and says to the king that you have no authority
53:17 on scriptures upon which to file for annulment.
53:20 It's against the word of God.
53:21 And for that, the eye of the
53:23 king is, is really raised at that point against him.
53:26 He was already not happy with him,
53:27 but now the eyer of the king is really raised against him
53:30 for that particular point.
53:32 And the king wanted him exiled and brought back to,
53:34 to, England to stand trial.
53:36 >>John: Interesting that he came out against the king,
53:39 because in other ways he's so very,
53:41 Tyndale was so very supportive of the monarchy.
53:43 >>Dr. Blue: Yes.
53:43 >>John: Talk to me about that.
53:45 >>Dr. Blue: Well, that's, that's the great contradiction I think.
53:47 You know, he supports the right of the king to rule,
53:49 and he takes his position that the king
53:51 has been given these powers by God to rule.
53:54 However, um, as it is today,
53:57 most people do not want to have their sins called out.
54:00 >>John: Right.
54:01 >>Dr. Blue: If you want to get someone upset with you,
54:03 then tell them what they are doing wrong.
54:05 >>John: Mm-hmm.
54:06 >>Dr. Blue: And, um, prosecution usually comes
54:08 when you take a position against someone who is entrenched
54:12 in their position that is obviously wrong
54:15 and yours is overwhelmingly correct.
54:19 And if they have the power, they persecute you.
54:21 >>John: And that's what happened to Tyndale ultimately,
54:26 paid for his faithfulness to God
54:27 by being strangled and burned at the stake,
54:30 at a little suburban northern part of Brussels
54:34 not far from the airport Vilvoorde.
54:36 >>Dr. Blue: Yes.
54:37 >>John: And, uh, in a certain sense
54:39 he's a sort of a forgotten figure.
54:41 In a certain sense, I mean there is a publishing house
54:42 named after the man for goodness' sakes,
54:44 that not nothing.
54:45 >>Dr. Blue: Right.
54:46 >>John: I think today if you ask people to recall
54:47 the great heroes of the reformation,
54:49 Luther, some of the other luminaries-
54:51 >>Dr. Blue: Mm-hmm.
54:53 >>John: Tyndale is probably down the list a little bit.
54:54 After all he did was translate the Bible,
54:58 but without his work the work of the other reformers
55:01 would have been almost nothing.
55:03 >>Dr. Blue: I think, I think Tyndale deserves a great,
55:06 uh, place in history.
55:07 Um, not only for translating the Bible into English,
55:10 but look at what ultimately happens because of,
55:13 because of that.
55:14 Uh, the English society was basically illiterate.
55:18 When the Bible gets translated into English,
55:20 now all of a sudden an illiterate mass
55:22 becomes literate.
55:24 >>John: Mm-hmm.
55:25 >>Dr. Blue: That changes forever the trajectory of England,
55:27 and changes the trajectory of the world.
55:29 None of that would have happened without Tyndale.
55:32 >>John: The Bible says the entrance of thy word
55:34 brings light.
55:35 >>Dr. Blue: Right.
55:37 >>John: Bringing the Word of God unto the people brought light
55:38 in lots of different ways.
55:39 >>Dr. Blue: It absolutely did.
55:40 It absolutely did.
55:41 And it, and it changed the way people think as,
55:44 as well about, about, uh, the church and about government.
55:46 >>John: So Tyndale translates the Bible.
55:48 >>Dr. Blue: Yeah.
55:50 >>John: The printing press is, uh, is invented, uh, and, and,
55:53 and the Bible starts to find its way into the hands
55:55 of the people, the price comes down.
55:57 Today you can buy one at the dollar store.
55:58 >>Dr. Blue: Right.
55:59 >>John: How should be relating to the Bible today?
56:01 You couldn't get it 500 years ago.
56:04 >>Dr. Blue: Right, right.
56:05 >>John: And now it's everywhere, bestselling book in the world.
56:08 So, so for us today, Tyndale is dead and gone,
56:10 his work lives on,
56:12 it impacts even translations of the Bible today.
56:14 But we have the Bible, talk about our, uh,
56:18 not a responsibility but our privilege as believers,
56:20 now that this work has been done,
56:23 we have the Bible in our hands.
56:24 >>Dr. Blue: Well, you know, we have this sacred text,
56:27 because there were people who were willing
56:29 to actually lay down their lives to give us that opportunity.
56:32 It sort of reminds me of, uh, of our children.
56:36 If you give them everything sometimes they don't value it.
56:40 And I think sometimes you've been given this great gift
56:42 and we don't value it,
56:43 because we didn't have to pay for it.
56:45 Um, but there are others who did pay for it.
56:47 If we take a look at where the Bible
56:49 is most cherished these days,
56:51 it is not in the western world,
56:52 but it's in those parts of the world
56:55 where people have not had access to the Word of God.
56:57 >>John: Sure.
56:58 >>Dr. Blue: And now as they're gaining access,
57:00 they're seeing these wonderful,
57:01 precious truths that have been hidden for them,
57:04 hidden from them for ages.
57:06 Those of us who have this precious word
57:09 in our hands right now,
57:10 we not only have an obligation to serve
57:12 those who went before us, but to reread it for ourselves,
57:16 to be reintroduced to this God that Tyndale
57:19 was willing to give his life for.
57:21 To catch the same vision that Tyndale had.
57:24 Tyndale was a strong believer
57:26 in the imminent return of Jesus Christ.
57:29 He loved to talk about the imminent return of Jesus Christ.
57:33 We live in a world right now of earthquakes,
57:35 and floods and tornadoes,
57:36 on the verge of war,
57:37 and if there was ever time when the people of God
57:41 need to look beyond this world to something greater it's now.
57:45 That word of God points us to this Jesus Christ
57:48 who loves us so much, he's coming back to get us,
57:51 and it points us to the Jesus Christ,
57:53 who loves us so much he's willing to speak to us
57:56 in our own language.
57:58 >>John: Amen.
57:58 Dr. Blue thanks so much.
57:59 It's been wonderful.
58:00 I appreciate it gratefully.
58:01 >>Dr. Blue: Thank you very much John.
58:02 >>John: And thank you for joining us
58:04 and be sure to join us next time on 500
58:06 for Rome and the reformation.
58:09 We'll take you to Rome and to the Vatican City
58:12 and you'll be blessed,
58:13 and you'll be encouraged in Your faith.
58:16 Let's pray together before we close.
58:18 Our father in heaven
58:19 we are grateful for people like William Tyndale,
58:22 and the men and women of great faith
58:24 who valued Your word, the Bible.
58:28 Uh, contact with you,
58:30 a relationship with Christ,
58:32 more than they valued life itself,
58:33 we today are the beneficiaries of their great commitment.
58:38 I pray Lord that you would let a fire of faith
58:41 burn inside of us,
58:43 that we'd be committed to you.
58:45 Oh, the spirit is willing, the flesh is weak.
58:47 So we pray that you'd give us the strength of Jesus.
58:50 The strength of Your Holy Spirit.
58:54 We look forward as Tyndale did to the day when Jesus returns
58:58 we want to go home and experience eternity with you.
59:01 Keep us now,
59:02 keep us until then and let Your word go around this world
59:06 and do Your work in powerful ways.
59:09 And if you can use us to be part of that,
59:12 Lord we would be forever grateful.
59:14 We thank you,
59:14 we love you,
59:15 we pray in Jesus' name.
59:17 Amen.
59:19 Thanks again.
59:20 I'm looking forward to seeing you again next time.
59:21 Until then remember
59:22 it is written,
59:24 "Man shall not live by bread alone,
59:25 but by every word that proceeds from the mouth of God."
59:29 ♪[Theme Music]♪


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Revised 2017-10-19