Thomas Bilney John Oldcastle William Tyndall Richard Bayfield John Tewkesbury James Bainham John Frith Burned and humiliated for their “crime” of trying to make the Bible accessible to the common man. May they be an example to us all.
@michaelaratnam65173 ай бұрын
Why should a complex litrature like the bible be made available to the "common man"???
@ianm.w15633 ай бұрын
@@michaelaratnam6517 are you really asking that question???
@michaelaratnam65173 ай бұрын
@@ianm.w1563 yep... It's a serious question...!!! Book reading is a skill that requires training and practice... Just randomly exposing uninitiated people to such a complex literature will make the bible a stumbling block to many... I have seen this happen!!!
@brianetheredge73233 ай бұрын
@@michaelaratnam6517 Wow...great question. Thanks for articulating your concern so concisely...it deserves an answer. A point of clarification first, if i may...who/whom do you consider the 'common man' to be? And, in that same spirit of clarification, what do you consider to be 'complex?" To the point of this video, why torture men like Tyndale (and women uncredited, as well) for the simple act of translating such a complex work into a language that is accessible to all people?
@michaelaratnam65173 ай бұрын
@@brianetheredge7323 there were so many translations of the Bible in various languages even before tyndale was born... Almost all these translations were welcome...!!! Only translation by pronounced heretics were forbidden... Tyndale was a heretic... He published heresy in a few books ... He was punished as per prevailing law...!!!
@innocentssemanda96463 ай бұрын
Watching from Uganda. Your videos have been a blessing to me as I struggle with many questions you have laboured to respond to. You introduced me to church history and I love the way you present your arguments. May the good lord above bless your ministry.
@LiamSGue3 ай бұрын
The Lord bless you sir! Your English is remarkable as well!
@minorityvoice92533 ай бұрын
He ain't the best church historian that is for sure. He looks at history through the lens of his theology. That won't get you true history just what you want to see.
@Tim.Foster1233 ай бұрын
@@minorityvoice9253 Any examples? (That's a petty bold claim)
@brianetheredge73233 ай бұрын
@@minorityvoice9253 Wow...got any cites for your conclusion? Interested in how you arrived at your position on Gavin's creds.
@computationaltheist72673 ай бұрын
@@minorityvoice9253 Everybody does that. Everybody looks at history through their theology.
@julesgomes29223 ай бұрын
What a gloriously inspiring video! I had the privilege of doing a doctorate in Cambridge while living and studying in the library at Tyndale House with the original Tyndale Bible just a few feet away from me.
@mj64933 ай бұрын
I read your recent article on Tyndale, Dr. Gomes. Nicely done.
@julesgomes29223 ай бұрын
@@mj6493 Thank you so much!
@Jeffdurbla113 ай бұрын
Did you meet Dr. Peter J Williams?
@julesgomes29223 ай бұрын
@Jeffdurbla11 Oh yes! He was the star of the place.
@Jeffdurbla113 ай бұрын
@@julesgomes2922 Man, I have all of his books. Did he have good character?
@morninglory5763 ай бұрын
I can't imagine never reading my Bible. Thank God it was made available to us all!
@scottwall84192 күн бұрын
The catholics can. They prefer it actually so the can bring back indulgences
@KYWingfold3 ай бұрын
I am a descendant of John Rogers, who completed the editing and compiling of Tyndale’s Bible with Coverdale’s remaining OT translation and was burned in 1555. Funny enough, I learned about this relation through my RC father. I take great comfort in the faith of our fathers. Thanks for telling their story, and may we be found faithful as they were!
@mooreoftammie3 ай бұрын
You should take great comfort in God’s Word, not fallible men (church “fathers”) who said true things and also face-planted on many things.
@KYWingfold3 ай бұрын
@@mooreoftammie phil 3:17
@mooreoftammie3 ай бұрын
@@KYWingfold yes imitate the APOSTLES. NOT the church “fathers.” Lol
@litigioussociety42493 ай бұрын
Your closing thoughts made me realize how much I take for granted the blessing to read the bible each day in English.
@fantasia553 ай бұрын
If it's a bad translation, it's not the Bible.
@litigioussociety42493 ай бұрын
@@fantasia55 Are you implying all of most English bibles are bad?
@fantasia553 ай бұрын
@litigioussociety4249 Tyndale's translation was bad, and so not a Bible at all. He deliberately twisted meanings so as to support his particular theology. Moreover, he added to it - extensive anti-Catholic rants.
@mattwilliams39023 ай бұрын
@@fantasia55 what passages were translated wrong? I would like to compare them
@fantasia553 ай бұрын
@@mattwilliams3902 I'm supposed to spend my day educating an internet rando? Do some research.
@Hillbillywayfarer3 ай бұрын
This gave me courage. Although I am incredibly thankful that we are no longer burning heretics or burying them alive, I have a genuine fear of modern day heresy hunters in this increasingly divided culture and the social and psychological torture they can inflict. It was refreshing to be reminded of those who suffered so greatly for their convictions and for the promulgation of the Word of God.
@TruthUnites3 ай бұрын
great point. Heresy hunting is alive and well. What we used to do with physical violence, now we do with cancel culture and slander. We will all need courage, but the Lord is with us.
@ravissary793 ай бұрын
@@TruthUnitesyou've felt it yourself, Gavin, but its just the tip if the iceberg. Now they're going after Michael Heiser now that he can't defend himself. Discernment channels do the evangelical church a HORRIBLE disservice. Ironically, the emphasis of hilighting heresy in the early chirch wasn't weeding out disagreement, but those who actively sow discord. The very Discernment ministries trying to silence and redirect believers away from views they feel are damnable are themselves the very ones creating functional heresy by getting lay people to divide over non-essentials.
@fortheaxons6204Ай бұрын
@@TruthUnites it hasn’t changed. It’s just reshaped. Cancel culture, and misuse of theological triage is the new heresy hunting! Amen!
@merrygrammarian15913 ай бұрын
I was thrilled to see this great tribute to one of my heros in the faith. I'm now working in Bible translation, specifically to get Scripture into languages that have no translation yet. Praise God for giving Tyndale a heart and a passion for the transmission of the Word of God in language that was understood by the common person. His legacy lives on in our work today!
@Christian-ut2sp3 ай бұрын
One of the reasons I’m so grateful about your Ministry is you just tell us the facts. There have been so many misrepresentations of church history that you’ve addressed. Hopefully this improves the discourse on these issues.
@Knewms2 ай бұрын
I feel sick watching this. I can’t even imagine what these brave Christians were going through. Thank you for sharing Tyndale’s story Dr. Gavin. We have it so easy today and yet a lot of us (myself included) don’t take advantage of the religious freedom we have to spread the gospel. Let Tyndale’s death remind us of the cost many men before us paid to pave the way for God’s truth to stand.
@Lone_Painter24 күн бұрын
I love church history, I find it extremely fascinating.Thanks for sharing these truths.
@jotink13 ай бұрын
When I hear and read the testimonies of these great men I am humbled by their faith. The power of the Gospel through being read in your own language and the joy it brought to these men is also very humbling.
@reverendjenkins80113 ай бұрын
Fantastic video. Thank you for your work. God bless.
@fab7an7583 ай бұрын
I hate when apologists use the excuse: “the church didn’t kill anyone, it was the secular authority” as if at that time church and state were separated like it is today
@charlesjoyce9823 ай бұрын
Did the Church direct or manage this killing in any way?
@fab7an7583 ай бұрын
@@charlesjoyce982did you watch the video? A king being excommunicated in case he decided to not execute a “heretic”giving reason for other monarchs to declare war on them seems like very solid involvement in the church’s part.
@GabrielPereira-hm1cz3 ай бұрын
@@fab7an758 Nowhere is that in the video. Typical Gavin, framing things to his advantage. Most heretics were not executed. What Gavin showed is that Kings had to deal with heresy in their territory, but that does not mean that they have to kill every heretic.
@charlesjoyce9823 ай бұрын
@@fab7an758no, did ortlund claim that this excommunication or threat of was related to the tyndale affair or a different trial?
@fab7an7583 ай бұрын
@@GabrielPereira-hm1czhe explains why heretics were burned around the 34 minute mark (even saying Protestants did it too and we should be called out for it btw). In the 36 minute mark he explains that the secular authority was threatened with excommunication from the religious authority. He does not go into detail on what that entails for the secular authority, but I urge you to look up what those consequences were. Now, bearing false witness (if you did watch the video) is a terrible thing. And if you didn’t I urge you to not make bogus lies because that brings shame to your tradition.
@MrTypingsound3 ай бұрын
Thank you for this channel, Gavin. It has been so helpful for my own faith journey, and I've gotten a lot out of it, and in particular your debates with Trent Horn. Keep going, brother, really appreciate and benefit from what you do!
@MrMikemcmillan9 күн бұрын
What a brave,sold out man of conviction,God help is be who you called us to be
@VickersJon3 ай бұрын
Imagine having the sacraments taken away from you for providing the word of God.
@Thatoneguy-pu8ty3 ай бұрын
Tragic.
@gigahorse14753 ай бұрын
Imagine branding people as heretics because they provided the blood of Christ as well as the body to people. 😬
@kevinbirdwell73752 ай бұрын
Thanks for shedding light on the tremendous sacrifice and contribution of Tyndale.
@jemeyezedten39303 ай бұрын
Really makes the bridge-buildy "nooooo we never said there was no salvation outside the church. Anathemas? Never heard of them. Youre just a seperated brother!" Shtick really really gross. The same church lying to me about their own positions killed pious men in the name of God for the purpose of maintaining a human power structure. Despicable. Next time a roman catholic asks me where I get my Bible I'll be sure to say William Tyndale. Seems without him and his fellows Christendom would have been at best stunted and at worst all but extinguished.
@charlesjoyce9823 ай бұрын
How does the Church kill. The Church didnt have armies or police force to enforce its rulings. Or did they?
@SeanusAurelius3 ай бұрын
@@charlesjoyce982 Watch the video. The church would order that a heretic be killed, and that any Christian monarch or officer must do it (sometimes upon threat of excommunication). Also, in many places, bishops actually did have their own armies, not to mention the Papal States were actual countries ruled directly by the Pope. FWIW, the Catholic position (I think to this day, definitely in medieval times) is Two Swords Doctrine, i.e. that the Church has the moral power to command both "swords", which roughly correspond to church teaching and state force, although it is not allowed to wield the state sword personally. This is in contrast to Luther, who said that the Kingdom of God and the kingdoms of the world are different.
@jemeyezedten39303 ай бұрын
@charlesjoyce982 separation of church and state is a concept from the reformation. The legitimacy of monarchs at the time came from the church. If, and when, the church ordered something done it was to be done at the point of the threat of being rendered illegitimate via excomunication. The church ordered the death of heretics. Tyndale, and people smuggling legitimate copies of the new testament, were no more heretics than you or I with our bookshelves of Bibles or Bible apps. And yet they were tortured and executed at the behest, and with the explicit approval, of the church of Rome. Nobody contests any of those facts.
@jemeyezedten39303 ай бұрын
@charlesjoyce982 The church had something much more powerful: excommunication. A monarch that was rejected by God was doomed. Church and state as seperate entities is a product of the reformers, the church of Rome rejected it. Even ignoring inquisitors, the church had plenty of force to wield politically that its lack of men at arms is of no regard.
@charlesjoyce9823 ай бұрын
@@jemeyezedten3930 ok, but any power to coerce others would have depended upon mere loyalty or free cooperation of the secular powers right? The Church could order this or that but the Church didnt have an army to enforce its orders on its own. So kings could simply refuse to follow the Church's orders.
@NoahRichardHarris3 ай бұрын
A great quote from Tyndale I often look to when I feel drawn to despair: From his Obedience of a Christian Man (1528) "If God promise riches, the way thereto is poverty. Whom he loveth, him he chasteneth: whom he exalteth, he casteth, down: whom he saveth, he damneth first. He bringeth no man to heaven, except he send him to hell first. If he promise life, he slayeth first: when he buildeth, he casteth all down first. He is no patcher; he cannot build on another man's foundation. He will not work until all be past remedy, and brought unto such a case, that men may see, how that his hand, his power, his mercy, his goodness and truth, hath wrought altogether. He will let no man be partaker with him of his praise and glory."
@theologywithseth3 ай бұрын
Fascinating video, Gavin! I'm freshly amazed at how high a price people paid just to make the Bible available to us, and I'm convicted by how frequently we can take that for granted. Thank you for making this!
@MyMemphisableАй бұрын
Thanks!
@SibleySteve3 ай бұрын
I was at the British Library last week, there is a Tyndale New Testament on display along with a Wycliffe psalter, a Great Bible owned by Henry 8, and these are just feet away from the oldest Bibles in existence - Codex Alexandrinus and Codex Sinaiticus. No one disputes Tyndale's significance. Anyone with questions can simply hop on a plane and visit the British Library to see it for themselves.
@thomasware59843 ай бұрын
How weird to see such a great comment undermined by the jarring "Henry 8". Perhaps poignant given the subject of translating things into plain English. I'm not sure it will catch on. The British library is a must visit for any tourist who cares about the written word - criminally neglected by most.
@DarkFiber232 ай бұрын
@@thomasware5984I'm not sure I understand your point. Henry VIII is undisputably a substantial figure in Reformation history and core to many of the key events described this video.
@johannesdekoning95213 ай бұрын
Baie dankie vir die tyd en moeite wat ingesit word in hierdie praatjies. Mag dit seënryke gevolge hê.
@tategarrett30423 ай бұрын
Also, this video did really make me reflect on how many things I take for granted, particularly the legal availability of the Bible in my own language, and at an affordable price.
@taylore223 ай бұрын
I love the heart of your ministry, clinging to the gospel and desiring it with all our hearts for it to be proclaimed. I will definitely be sharing this video with others. I’m sure a lot of us who love your channel appreciate your work and taking the time to talk about these things. I’m humbled and yet again encouraged by this video! ✝️
@Bradchacha3 ай бұрын
I was excited for this video (which is funny because I knew next to nothing about William Tyndale). Now that it's here, I'm ready to learn, and continue growing as a Christian. Dr Garvin, as a brother in Christ, I'm grateful for the equipping that has happened through your videos. May the Lord keep you, bless you and your family and if we don't meet here, I look forward to having a chat once we're rejoined to the bridegroom. Watching from Kenya. (Just to add: why do I watch your videos? Love. You exude love and even as you've introduced this video, it's the same thing again. No pomp, no self-righteous attitude - just an example of 1 Corinthians 13. Yeah..)
@cheezman91803 ай бұрын
only half way through, but this work and video is incredible. Thank you Gavin.
@survivordave3 ай бұрын
There are no words for the unspeakable cruelties committed by men who called themselves servants of Christ, in the name of Christ. 😥 Thanks for the video. Unpleasant, but necessary information.
@geordiewishart16833 ай бұрын
Rev 17:6 And I saw the woman drunken with the blood of the saints, and with the blood of the martyrs of Jesus: and when I saw her, I wondered with great admiration.
@roses9933 ай бұрын
@@geordiewishart1683sounds like rcc
@grit16793 ай бұрын
You mean Catholics?
@voldmerot3 ай бұрын
@@roses993amen to that.
@ryanharvey63753 ай бұрын
Protestants have killed Catholic christians. And Muslims have killed Christians. And communists have killed Christians....etc. How can someone say this woman represents the Catholic Church?? It seems she is a spirit behind the martyrdom of any true Christian- catholic, orthodox, or protestant.
@Apocmanual253 ай бұрын
Beautiful Gavin! Thank you! Baptist from the Knoxville area
@jmfwest3 ай бұрын
Thanks for your work Dr. Ortlund. For all the head knowledge involved with videos like this, I always find myself tearing up when learning the history of courageous brothers and sisters who remain faithful to the bitter end. Its humbling. And I’m grateful for your narration of those moments especially.
@KalonOrdona23 ай бұрын
"church didn't kill Tyndale" same energy as "jews didn't kill Jesus"
@scottwall84192 күн бұрын
Thats the excuse of those on the wrong side of history. "It wasn't me". Catholics didn't let Christians read the bible....seems to me thw devil has had a field day and quite the success in the catholic church as he did in the pharisees of Jesus time. With the exception of the name if Jesus we are two different religions. I feel uncomfortable calling them Christians since they change the gospel anathmatising anyone who disagrees and pretending those little men in funny hats have the power to snatch me out of Gods hands. By creating anathemas and arching them to salvation they actually anathmatise themselves but preaching another gospel other than Christ...and him crucified.
@joehernandez32313 ай бұрын
Thank you for distilling the available scholarship into a digestible format like this. This was helpful and encouraging.
@TitusThundr3 ай бұрын
Excellent work Gavin. God is glorified in your ministry as its obvious you give your best and speak truth in love (Col 3:1-17). Thank you brother.
@deannmiller47583 ай бұрын
What an incredible story. Thanks for your thoughtful telling of it. It was so brutal back then and may again become brutal for believers. May we be ready when the time come. I cant believe i just discovered your channel because of becketts channel. Im very interested in church history. Thanks again!
@McFatgen17 күн бұрын
Thank you for your well-founded, differentiated, precise and fair, loving explanations of church history. It is what is often missing in evangelical circles. Unfortunately, theological debates today are based more on subjective feelings than on profound knowledge.
@TennisFreakHD3 ай бұрын
Thank you for this video, Gavin! This is of immense importance.
@beaulin56283 күн бұрын
What happened to Tyndale shows how intensely religious men want to keep control over God's people rather than submitting themselves to the Word of God as the authority over the Church. They desire to add their own ideas and "traditions" and will loose the utmost cruelty on any who expose their errors with the Word of God. Tyndale was a great man of God and paid the price for that.
@srich75032 күн бұрын
There were plenty of people before Tyndale that helped pave the way… Other than Jerome’s Latin Vulgate in 385, there were also these versions of the Bible into the common languages before Wycliff. Notice some are considered saints… 680 - Caedmon of Whitby, known for the earliest “old english” interpretation (in part) of the scriptures. He is listed as a saint in the church. 700 - Aldhelm [Eadhelm] bishop of Sherborne, another saint of the church, published the Psalms in old english 710 - Guthlac, hermit near Peterborough 735 - Venerable Bede’s work 820 - Bishop Egbert 864 - Saints Cyril and Methodius (Slavic complete ??) 880 - Saint King Alfred the Great partial work 1002 - Archbishop Ælfric 1186 - Miroslav Gospel (Siberian) 1335 - The Royal Tetraevangelia (Bulgarian 4 gospels) 1517 - Complutensian Polyglot And many others before Luther’s in partial by 1522 footnote: 5 years before Luther’s German translation there were 36,000 German manuscripts in circulation, and a complete printed Bible in the German vernacular - source: Johann Michael Reu, Luther’ German Bible:A Historical Presentation Together with Collection of Sources. Peace!!!
@MikeOzmun3 ай бұрын
Gavin, your ministry is invaluable.
@notnotandrew3 ай бұрын
Hearing these stories, I weep for how my own faith compares to that of these men. God grant me strength.
@Kirk-d7v3 ай бұрын
Listen to *Pastor Joseph Prince* podcasts,strength to overcome
@raplma3 ай бұрын
Thanks for bringing this man's life alive again.. In the UK there was a film based on his life called "God's Outlaw" produced by Channel 4, well worth watching if you can find it.
@Gronky-sv5yp3 ай бұрын
Great video brother Gavin. Peace and grace of God be with you and your family.
@ekatrinya3 ай бұрын
This is exactly what I have been wanting to learn about, great work!
@johnnyg.54993 ай бұрын
I always view your videos, Gavin. They give me a lot to think about and your perspective is clearly both INFORMED, and PROTESTANT. And that's what I want.....the insider's perspective. I can say, as a Roman Catholic, if any RCs have a beef with this video, it's THEIR problem. HISTORY IS HISTORY.... not "Catholic history." I continue to look forward to your future presentations.
@srich75033 ай бұрын
Hmmmm thats what i always say as a catholic myself and you cannot hide from history and ALL its implications… History shows us that Jesus didn't leave us a bible, - the apostles didn't tell us which books belong in the bible, - the church fathers never agreed on the 27 books of the NT through the 4th century and ONLY the 27 books, - not only did they not agree but their individual lists of would-be NT canons were GROWING during this time. Therefore, if it wasn't the Catholic/Orthodox church, guided by the Holy Spirit, that compiled the 27 books of the NT in the 4th century, with the guidance of the Holy Spirit, and preserved these scriptures by laboriously hand copying them over and over throughout the centuries before the invention of the printing press, the “rule of faith” for many, please tell us who did? And if this church no longer exists today, what good is the text which came forth from her if she couldn't sustain herself? Peace!!!
@shelbyhurd3 ай бұрын
You are refreshingly reasonable. I can see God’s hand clearly in your work. God bless and keep you, brother.
@RansomedSoulPsalm49-153 ай бұрын
Glory to God. Its amazing the strength and courage that God blessed these men with.
@Michiganman8003 ай бұрын
‘Be of good comfort, Master Ridley, and play the man; we shall this day light such a candle by God’s grace in England as shall never be put out’
@LoriLev11073 ай бұрын
Wow! Thank you so much for this video! It's very sad, but at the same time inspiring.
@raphaelfeneje4863 ай бұрын
The more you go deep into history without bias, the more you'll be thankful that the reformation did happen.
@markmusatau19293 ай бұрын
To go deeper into history is to cease being Roman catholic…
@raphaelfeneje4863 ай бұрын
@@markmusatau1929 Amen ✝️🙏❤️
@trismegistus28813 ай бұрын
The split up of Christendom into thousands of denominations and sects has not strengthened our faith. This is a bad fruit of the reformation, even if the reformation might have been a good thing in one other way or another.
@raphaelfeneje4863 ай бұрын
@@trismegistus2881 There are no thousands of denomination. And it's a good thing because it even enhanced civilization and boosted education. Christianity isn't a monarchical religion. It's not Islam. And what strengthens the body of Christ isn't to be under a pope, it's to know God and do his will.
@raphaelfeneje4863 ай бұрын
@@trismegistus2881 Imagine being under a system that sells salvation and limit people to know God's word. That's what will strengthen your faith, right?
@JohnHanly3 ай бұрын
Hey Dr. Ortlund, you said, ‘I wish someone would make a film of it’, Actually somebody did a pretty good job and named it, “God‘s Outlaw: William Tyndale” 1986.
@StandupGuy553 ай бұрын
Excellent video Dr. Ortlund 👍
@jordand57323 ай бұрын
Gavin, it’s like you are in my mind sometimes. Thomas More’s legacy and his patron saint status were a big wake up call to me when i was reviewing church history. His intellect was admirable, but his actions were reprehensible. I knew then and still believe that i cannot in good conscience consider him to be a saint, certainly not in a clear cut sort of way. And i couldnt see how one could both condemn his zeal for torturing his competition and also look to him as a patron saint guiding political leaders. The math wasnt mathing, so to speak. This along with many other topics eventually led to no longer being catholic. While i now consider myself a mere christian and mostly protestant leaning christian, i still attend weekly mass (but do not fully participate/do not partake of the sacraments of the roman Catholic Church)with my family while looking for other churches to lead our family to. Its been a journey. I first converted in my late twenties and was enamored with being catholic for 5 years or so, then left a little over a year ago due to confusion in the church and topics that I just could not square the circle on when i took an honest look at church history. Since leaving roman catholicism its been a journey trying to find a church i feel called to. While that has been confusing and has had its ups and downs, I’ve learned that leaning on christ is the only thing solid and i know he will lead me and my family where we must go (should mention here i wont force my wife to leave roman catholicism, nothing forced with theology ever seems to go well in the long run, ahem, catholic supporters of Thomas More’s methods). I digress, but want to thank Gavin and other channels like anglican aesthetics, javier perdomo, and Ruslan for their continued work with Protestantism and mere christianity (not that all these channels identify as mere Christian, just that there is overlap). I guess I’ll stop writing now lol. God bless everyone reading this, especially those that disagree and are angered by it.
@roses9933 ай бұрын
There are so many beautiful bible based churches. May God lead youvto the right one❤
@NoahRichardHarris3 ай бұрын
We have a local school named after Thomas More, and It makes me tremble when I think of the horrors this man brought on his supposed brothers. Calvin gets some heat in dealing with servetus (rightly so) but I feel like Thomas More is not really talked about enough. Certainly not a "Man for all seasons."
@SeanusAurelius3 ай бұрын
May God bless you and your church with a great church, brother. Former Catholic here. I went very low church for a while as all I wanted was the Gospel unimpeded, but have swung back a little and am looking into Anglicanism....but I've worshipped with wonderful Christians of all sorts of flavours in all sorts of good, faithful churches.
@hettinga3593 ай бұрын
@@NoahRichardHarris as Gavin said, he was at least consistent. After persecuting what he saw as heresy he didn’t shrink from his position when the tide turned against him. Many in England were happy to tell Henry whatever he wanted to hear and More was the only one who had the guts to say no
@tonywallens2173 ай бұрын
Well I guess you would have to say the same about Augustine who believed in forced conversion.
@kylie57413 ай бұрын
Excellent video as always.
@american19113 ай бұрын
Thank you for making this video. You are a blessing to us.
@Womb_to_Tomb_Apologetics16 күн бұрын
Few people know the name William Tyndale. But bc of him, they know the one he proclaimed. ✝️
@srich75032 күн бұрын
FerwER people know the following names that came before Tyndale yet played a bigger part of proclaiming… Other than Jerome’s Latin Vulgate in 385, there were also these versions of the Bible into the common languages before Wycliff. Notice some are considered saints… 680 - Caedmon of Whitby, known for the earliest “old english” interpretation (in part) of the scriptures. He is listed as a saint in the church. 700 - Aldhelm [Eadhelm] bishop of Sherborne, another saint of the church, published the Psalms in old english 710 - Guthlac, hermit near Peterborough 735 - Venerable Bede’s work 820 - Bishop Egbert 864 - Saints Cyril and Methodius (Slavic complete ??) 880 - Saint King Alfred the Great partial work 1002 - Archbishop Ælfric 1186 - Miroslav Gospel (Siberian) 1335 - The Royal Tetraevangelia (Bulgarian 4 gospels) 1517 - Complutensian Polyglot And many others before Luther’s in partial by 1522 footnote: 5 years before Luther’s German translation there were 36,000 German manuscripts in circulation, and a complete printed Bible in the German vernacular - source: Johann Michael Reu, Luther’ German Bible:A Historical Presentation Together with Collection of Sources. Peace!!!
@Eyelash853 ай бұрын
This video was very good. Thanks brother!
@DrBob-gr5ru3 ай бұрын
I remember watching "God's Outlaw" about a decade ago. One of the first church history movies I watched that helped to keep me Protestant.
@elizabethhunter45253 ай бұрын
So interesting, thank you for all you do, I always come away blessed after listening to the truth!
@siennaw62553 ай бұрын
This is a profoundly moving video, especially as a Protestant. Thank you Dr Ortlund for so bravely and powerfully sharing this! I did have a question, I was doing some research and I kept coming across arguments that were in support of Thomas More and that Moynahan’s work is 'fiction' and not based on any evidence...I was struggling to find evidence from a quick search about Thomas More's heartbreakingly brutal role in killing such a wonderful man. Would really love to hear your thoughts and clarifications to ease my mind on this. Thanks in advance & God bless :)
@TruthUnites3 ай бұрын
Thank you! More was killed before Tyndale and so it was other Roman Catholic authorities who oversaw his inquisition. If people want to dismiss Moynahan, one could simply consult Daniell's biography instead, which has the same view of More.
@siennaw62553 ай бұрын
@TruthUnites thank you so much for your reply! Okay that's helpful, appreciate it.
@PKAnane3 ай бұрын
Thank you very much Gavin.
@veritasquidestveritas3 ай бұрын
Canonise him a saint! Great ministry. Really appreciate the quality of your work. The new book is brilliant.
@TribalNathan3 ай бұрын
Very much needed video Thank you so much for the truth.
@roses9933 ай бұрын
Extremely thankful for my beautiful bible and for the amazing and much needed reformation!!! Praise God!!❤❤❤😊 Ps so thankful for men of God like tyndale!
@michaelbateman20197 күн бұрын
Your outro music is awesome. And all the content before it of course.
@brianetheredge73233 ай бұрын
Thanks for the amazing detail, Gavin. The timing is equally amazing: I was discussing just this topic with a Catholic friend, who used the 2 talking points you mentioned at the top of the video nearly verbatim. He won't prove either assertion, though...and this video explains why he might be (quietly) struggling with his proof.
@benreed35173 ай бұрын
Inspirational. THANK YOU JESUS for the faithful testimony of these saints. WE ARE standing on their shoulders!
@lukekillam60363 ай бұрын
So inspiring. I’ll never forget as a kid watching one of the NEST animated videos on his life, a story I still vividly remember today
@mikekayanderson4083 ай бұрын
Thanks Gavin. Very good video and look forward to more like this. Yes it is good to know about those who suffered for the sake of the Gospel and have made it possible for us to have so many Bibles available to us today. We should not forget the price they paid.
@Cayday892 ай бұрын
It’s just sad to think that the Catholic Church made Thomas More a canonized saint when he was heavily responsible for the torture and murder of Protestants.
@jenniferboht961Ай бұрын
I didn’t know this and made my Catholic boss a Thomas Moore plaque because it’s his favorite saint…I feel like an idiot
@geoffjsАй бұрын
Why sad, he died for his faith? Can you provide proof or is this another lie?
@jenniferboht961Ай бұрын
@ google it
@geoffjsАй бұрын
@@Cayday89 Historian John Guy commented that "such charges are unsupported by independent proof."[note 9] Modern historian Diarmaid MacCulloch finds no evidence that he was directly involved in torture.[note 10] Richard Marius records a similar claim, which tells about James Bainham, and writes that "the story Foxe told of Bainham's whipping and racking at More's hands is universally doubted today".[note 11] More himself denied these allegations: Stories of a similar nature were current even in More's lifetime and he denied them forcefully. He admitted that he did imprison heretics in his house - 'theyr sure kepynge'[note 12] - he called it - but he utterly rejected claims of torture and whipping... 'as help me God.
@tategarrett30423 ай бұрын
Thank you for taking the effort to put this video together and tell the story thoroughly. I was not aware of many of these details or the context.
@NelBrandybuck3 ай бұрын
As a history teacher who teaches this era of history, I feel compelled to comment that Tyndale had openly opposed Henry VIII's annulment. Given this fact and the fact that Henry VIII had been the reigning monarch signing off on the execution of Tyndale's friends and the burning of Tyndale's work, I don't question Tyndale's decision to stay away at all.
@YouMayKnowMeAsNate2 ай бұрын
Thanks be to God for giving us his word and those who have fought so hard to make it accessible
@annychest7182 ай бұрын
but they still believe what the Anglo church taught and rarely study the word of Jehovah and his first born son Jesus Christ
@YouMayKnowMeAsNate2 ай бұрын
@ no idea who/what you’re talking about
@aaronlewis89483 ай бұрын
While I know this is about William Tyndale, the Protestants in Scotland were similarly treated. In Scotland, George Wishart and Patrick Hamilton were martyred among others.
@RogerBesst3 ай бұрын
To me, this is one of your best researched lectures, in this case, revealing the necessity of the Reformation, and the sacrifice of true followers of Jesus to bring it about. Even at this time, Christians must be vigilant.
@christopherquigley54683 ай бұрын
I recently heard a famous Catholic apologist make these same claims. Personally I find the claim that he was burned heresy, but it wasn’t the Catholic Church that was responsible, to be contradictory. Heresy isn’t a secular crime. It is a crime against the Church. And it is the church, not the secular authorities, that bring the charge of heresy.
@TempleofChristMinistries3 ай бұрын
Is the same with Christ, even though the Romans crucified him, it was the church who brought the charges against him.
@trismegistus28813 ай бұрын
Laws against heresy were generally created by secular authorities and they also enacted the punishments. So they did play the most important role. However, the Church was always called upon when determining who was a persevering heretic and who was not. Both groups worked together, as there was no clear distinction between Church and state. In the eyes of secular authorities, spreading false doctrines was equated to rebellious behaviour which could undermine and destroy the entire society. The same was true for spreading unauthorised translations.
@TempleofChristMinistries3 ай бұрын
@@trismegistus2881 but it was the church who ruled the state that's why the secular authorities created the laws of heresy in the first place that was the problem, that's why in the constitution the separation of Church and state was not because the state ruled the church but the church ruled the state.
@trismegistus28813 ай бұрын
@@TempleofChristMinistries it is not correct to say that the Church ruled the state. Of course, some Popes claimed to have supreme authority in all matters, but this was never fully accepted. In the 11th century, the Pope could still prove stronger than an Emperor (Canossa), but by the time of Luther and Tyndale, his power had seriously weakened. In France, for instance, the Church operated partially independent from the Pope (Gallican Church).
@sonicrocks20073 ай бұрын
Completely skipped by ortlund Is tynsdale attacked the church and pope and said they need surrender wealth and power and give it to the king to rule. Then he attacked the king as woman and baby. Then he then told his fellow priest and wanted priests to not own any possessions or have kids etc. So what he did was more inciting than ortlund may be saying.
@jayakare3 ай бұрын
Wow, thank you for bringing this history of bible translations to light. It made me appreciate my bible even more.
@jaynelightfoot8843 ай бұрын
Thank you! Very informative ….
@EricFromPTownАй бұрын
1:01:16 I’m embarking in a writing systems development role in Bible translation and I found this really encouraging. Thank you
@Caffer92863 ай бұрын
God bless you brother.
@sebastiansilva60583 ай бұрын
I'd like to add to your point of not taking our Bibles for granted, even today we could have been born in a country where our faith is persecuted, countries where sometimes the only things our brothers and sisters have are small shreds of paper with a couple of verses of God's word written by hand, and yet we have the privilege to even carry the Bible in digitalized form in our pockets, being able to access it at any time we want. That is a privilege far too many of us easily forget. Thanks for the amazing work you put on this video Dr. Ortlund, God bless.
@SCOTTISHSOULFOOD13 ай бұрын
Great content, clearly and challengingly presented. I have never understood the reverence for Sir Thomas Moore and his portrayal as only a victim of state religious intolerance when he was an enthusiastic preparator of state religious violence on many others.
@jrichardsonus3 ай бұрын
I enjoy your "deep dive" history lessons on particular characters. I think that this is a good pivot from apologetics.
@davebruce883 ай бұрын
Thank you for this
@galantkoh39173 ай бұрын
@TruthUnites Excellent, thank you! Minor point - the city of Norwich - is pronounced Norrich, ( the 'no' as in none, and 'rich' as that word sounds).
@Slice.of.heaven.with.Lauren3 ай бұрын
I have learned so much, thank you
@Tamisvideodiary3 ай бұрын
It painful to have your traditions challenged, but THE TRUTH REMAINS.
@shawnc.madden21812 ай бұрын
Translation and Teaching. Both need to be done. Good job brother. Good to have a Church Historian close to hand.
@JadDragon3 ай бұрын
I'm thankful for all the work others have done and do so we can grow deeper in our understanding of God. Jesus lives! ♥️ and is Yahweh God 🙏🏻 Christ ✝️ and King 👑
@jfitz65173 ай бұрын
Thank you for this video, I only recently learned about Tyndale. I had no idea Thomas Moore was such a monster, it seems he reaped what he’d sown.
@HainishMentat3 ай бұрын
Excellent work. I would love to see a sequel about Servetus.
@zemog19903 ай бұрын
Great video Sir ty.
@AlexCPauwels853 ай бұрын
This is so important to remember! The names of these heroes who loved the Lord truly and set the stage for the enlightement of souls through the reading of Scripture. Tyndale lived only 42 years as many of his friends, they dies young but what a legacy and impact ❤️
@SimplyChristАй бұрын
I recently read comments in a Catholic forum that blew my mind. Nearly all of them were defending the horrid execution of so-called heretics. Some said they had no problem at all with what the church did. More disturbing were the number of comments saying the same should be done to all Protestant teachers. There are some truly disturbed religious people in this world.
@foodforthought83088 күн бұрын
Wow as someone deeply considering Catholicism, I am so sorry you had that experience with Catholics. I am fortunate to know many who would not agree with the Church's actions at that time
@SimplyChrist8 күн бұрын
@ Thanks for your reply! I know there are many who do not think that way. I spend a lot of time in monasteries in Europe and haven’t run into anyone like that. So it’s definitely not across the board. However, there are quite a few on the net. Thx!
@josephryan88993 ай бұрын
Awesome video! They are all with their Lord in his presence!
@rushmik3 ай бұрын
A chilling yet inspiring tale clearly and fairly presented - thanks for another video! I don’t think it’s necessarily worth a re-upload or anything like that, but there is a gap in the editing at 55:50. I only mention it on the chance that an important clip was missing.
@TruthUnites3 ай бұрын
thanks! will edit it out, appreciate the feedback!
@gigahorse14753 ай бұрын
It’s encouraging how much hope these Christians had during such a dark and discouraging time. It’s hard to comprehend how people who claim to be Christians can do the most devilish things. I find it discouraging today, but where we are today at least in the USA is a lot less dark when it comes to the state of the church.
@macseamus19933 ай бұрын
Hey Gavin- quick correction: The “y” on “ye Gospel” is the letter thorn and pronounced “the” It’s one of those weird letters that hangs on from the Anglo Saxon period and looks similar to a y so in print the same symbol is used, but the pronunciation is contextual. Really though- awesome video!
@Berkana3 ай бұрын
7:56 The movie “God’s Outlaw” is about Tyndale. I saw it via Amazon Prime video.
@HectorTheGr83 ай бұрын
You’re a blessing to me Gavin. Thank you for all you do. I am thankful for the men who died to get me a Bible.
@cassidyanderson37223 ай бұрын
Even Holy Orthodoxy owes a debt to Tyndale, as the KJV and NKJV are the NT of all English speaking members of the Church. What a blessing it was to already have a great English translation when Orthodoxy finally arrived in the English speaking world.
@hglundahl3 ай бұрын
There was also a Roman Catholic translation available. Douay Rheims.
@JesusAlwaysIsGod3 ай бұрын
@@hglundahl In English before Tyndale?
@cassidyanderson37223 ай бұрын
@@hglundahl Isn’t the D-R a translation of the Vulgate, though? The KJV is a translation of our original Greek versions.
@TruthUnites3 ай бұрын
@@hglundahl I addressed that in the video. It came much later, and wasn’t from the Greek and Hebrew.
@SeanusAurelius3 ай бұрын
@@hglundahl The D-R is almost a century after Tyndale. What a lot of Catholics don't know is that the DRB got a total rewrite in the mid 18th century by Challoner, and he actually switched to using KJV as the base text type, not the old DRB. In other words, a modern DRB has more in common with the KJV than its predecessor of the same name. Which actually means that the primary author of the modern DRB is.....Tyndale!