"I suffer trouble as an evil doer, even unto bonds (Paul was in jail), but the word of
God is not bound, therefore I endure all things for the elect's sake, that they may also obtain the
salvation which is in Christ Jesus" (II Timothy 2:2-I0).
NEARLY 500 YEARS AGO
Nearly one hundred years before Columbus discovered America, there was a boy
named John Gooseflesh, living in the old town of Mainz. His mother helped to make a living for
the family by preparing parchment for the priests to write on. John liked very much to carve and
cut with his knife. One day he was sifting beside the fire watching a pot of purple dye that his
mother was heating and amusing himself by carving and cutting his name in wood. Suddenly
one of the pieces of wood, with a letter cut on it, fell into the dye pot. He snatched at it, caught it,
but dropped it again, this time onto a piece of parchment lying nearby. It fell upside down, and
when he picked it up, there on the parchment, was the letter 'h' clearly printed.
PRINTING INVENTED
Years went by. The boy of Mainz did not forget what happened that day by the fire in
his old home. It had given him an idea that some way could be found to make books more easily
than to copy them all out by hand as had always been done. So he cut little wooden blocks and
dipped them in dye, setting them this way and that, making forms for them to be placed in and he
finally had the first printing press the world had ever seen. You will find his name in every history
every written - John Gutenberg, it is in German.
NO ENGLISH BIBLE
That happened in 1454. That very same year, a great battle was fought in
Constantinople between the Christians and the Turks and the Christians were driven out of the
city, at that time the greatest city in the world, where most of the schools of learning were located.
Greek scholars came to live in all parts of Europe. All at once these wise men became very much
interested in the Greek New Testament and began to read it instead of the old Latin one they had
always read. They made many people think about how wonderful it would be to have the Bible in
the language of the people, so everyone could read it. With the new study of the language and
the new printing press, things began to happen.
WILLIAM TYNDALE
It began first in an old school in England where a young man named William Tyndale
was studying. He was a good Greek scholar and had read the New Testament in the very
language in which it was written. It had come to mean so much to him that he wanted it to mean
something to all the people around him.
One day some students were talking about all this new interest in the Bible, and one
man said very positively:
"The Bible is not necessary. It is all foolishness to talk about translating it into English
for the people to read. ALL THEY NEED IS THE WORD OF THE POPE. We had better be
without God's laws than THE POPE'S LAWS!"
William Tyndale rose from his chair, and striking his clenched fist on the table
shouted, "I defy the pope and all his laws; and, if God spares me, I will one day make the boy
that drives the plow in England to know more of the Scripture than THE POPE does!"
NOT AN IDLE BOAST
IT WAS NOT AN IDLE BOAST. William Tyndale went right to work to make an
English Bible that all the people could read. A rich merchant, HUMPHREY MONMOUTH, gave
him his home to work in and day and night he worked, hoping some publisher would print it when
he hod it ready.
POPE-VERY POWERFUL
BUT TYNDALE HAD FORGOTTEN THAT THE POPE WAS VERY POWERFUL. A Bible in the
English language was just what the pope did not want. Presently all the authorities of England
turned against him and soon, even his friend Monmouth dared not help him. Tyndale sadly said,
"In England there is no room for attempting the translation of the Scriptures."
Did he quit?.
No. WILLIAM TYNDALE WAS NO QUITTER. He just left England and went to
live in Hamburg, Germany. Here he could never be sure his life was safe, for the English
Catholic bishops and priests were so angry with him for going on with his work that they hired
spies to hinder him, to keep him from making friends and to prevent his ever getting his Bible
printed.
THERE WAS A PRINTING PRESS AT COLOGNE. So over there he went and
found printers ready to go to work on his first English Bible. He tried to keep his work a secret for
he knew the English Catholic bishops would arrest him if they knew the book was nearly done.
One day a warning came to him to flee for his life. A Catholic priest had found out
from a drunken printer that his English Bible was nearly off the press, and had come to arrest him.
He snatched his precious sheets of paper and fled from the town, going to Worms where Martin
Luther lived.
PRINTED IN GERMANY
There the FIRST ENGLISH BIBLE was printed, two sizes being made, one large
and one small, for he thought if the English Catholic bishops found the large ones, he might be
able to hide the smaller ones.
Now they must be gotten to England. In barrels all covered with cloth and articles
for sale, in bales that looked like cloth, in sacks of flour, in every way that could be found to
hide them, they were sent across to England.
DID THEY GET ACROSS?
They did, in large numbers, and the Catholic bishops found out they were being
sold. Every seaport was carefully watched, and many a package of Bibles was found by the
officers and BURNED. But more Bibles came. They could not stop them, and some of them
would always get to people who wanted to read them.
ENEMIES HELP
Finally the Catholic bishop of London had a bright idea! He decided he would buy
all the copies that were printed, through a merchant in Germany! Then there would be no more
Bibles to come across the water. He did not know that the merchant he asked to do this was a
friend of William Tyndale.
This friend thought he saw a way to help Tyndale. He knew that right at that time
Tyndale needed money more than anything else to pay his printers for the work they had done
and start a new printing of the Bible. So he said, "My Lord, I will be glad to attend to this matter.
But it will take money to do it, for the men who have these books in Germany hold them at a high
price."
"My dear Sir," said the bishop, "do your best to get them for me, all of them, for they are very bad
books. I will gladly pay you whatever they cost, for I intend to burn them all and end this matter."
MONEY SUPPLIED
What fun it was to the merchant! He went to Tyndale, bought his books at a good
price and brought them over to England while Tyndale went right to work on a new printing for he
now had plenty of money. The poor Catholic bishop thought when he burned all those Bibles,
there would never be another ENGLISH BIBLE! Imagine how he felt when he learned that more
Bibles than ever before were coming into England. So many came that the officers simply could
not stop them.
"HOW CAN THIS BE?" a man who had been arrested for helping Tyndale, was
asked.
"I will tell you truly, my lord," the man replied,
"tis yourself that gave us the money to print the Bibles!"
TYNDALE, AN ANA-BAPTIST IS HANGED AND BURNED FOR TRANSLATING
THE WORD OF GOD!
He was so mad that he stirred up all England against Tyndale. All the great Catholic
preachers began to preach about it, most of them thinking it would do a great deal of harm to
have the BIBLE In the language of the people, a few very brave and wise men saying it would be
much better for England. At last Tyndale won, for the Bible was everywhere.
One old Bishop said sadly, "It passeth my power, or that of any man, to hinder it now!"
So the Bible came to England, and from England to all the world. But the man who
gave it to the world never knew what a glorious victory he had won. Away in a little German town,
afraid to walk in the street for fear some spy of the English Catholic bishops, or the pope of Rome
should see him, working night and day that everybody might have the Bible, he longed for his
home in England. He loved England better than his life. His enemies sent men to make him
believe they were his friends, and persuade him to come home. But he knew what they wanted.
He knew, once in England, they would arrest and kill him.
TYNDALE'S JUDAS
Not all his enemies were in England, however. There was a man named Phillips,
whom he believed to be loyal and true. But Phillips was a spy sent by the pope to trap Tyndale.
One night as Tyndale walked out from his home to enjoy the evening air, a band of men set upon
him, bound him, and carried him away to a dark prison.
A MARTYR
There was no trial. They knew they were going to kill him. He knew it, too. Gladly
he laid down his life, for he had done the work he had set himself to do. The Bible was in England,
in the language all the people could read. One day they led him out to a stake. They hanged him
and then burned his body. He asked them if he might send a message to England and they told
him "no".
Then he closed his eyes and prayed earnestly, "Lord, open the king of England's
eyes."
Brave William Tyndale! No man ever gave more than he! The Bible we read he
made possible for us, for from that first translation, all the translations since have been made.
I never think of him without thinking of Jesus' words about Himself, "He laid down
His life for His sheep." Surely William Tyndale followed the footsteps of Jesus.
"God's truth has never been popular. Wherever Christianity becomes popular, it is
not on its way to die; it has died already." (A. W. Tozer)
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