THE FORWARD MOMENTUM OF THE REFORMATION
One of the most striking stories of the Reformation is that of Thomas Bilney, one of the first English reformers. Bilney was a student at Cambridge and while he was there he struggled under the weight of his sins much like Luther had done before him.
One day Bilney purchased a copy of Erasmus’ translation of the Bible, mainly because he had heard that the language was exquisite. Thumbing through it he came across this verse: “This is a faithful saying, and worthy of all acceptation, that Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners; of whom I am chief.” (1 Timothy 1:15). The verse immediately struck a chord in his heart. He was that sinner, that chief sinner and could it be that Jesus came into the world to die for him? The thought broke him and made him whole all at the same time. Writing about the experience later he said “This one sentence did so exhilarate my being…that immediately I felt a marvelous comfort and quietness insomuch that my bruised bones leaped for joy”
Bilney had discovered the gospel and with that discovery came a personal revolution that touched the lives of so many people that he came into contact with, the most notable being Hugh Latimer, Thomas Arthur, John Frith and William Tyndale. So many amazing Protestant luminaries were influenced and impacted by Bilney and it all began with a deeply personal experience with the gospel of Jesus Christ, that first changed Bilney himself. This was the essence of the Protestant Reformation and it was encapsulated in every single movement that arose under its banner. Martin Luther was transformed by what he discovered in Romans 1:16-17 and his bold stance for the truth sparked the Reformation in Germany and throughout Christendom. Ulrich Zwingli read the word of God and it shook his humanistic ideology to the core, replacing it with a deep and humble dependence on God and His word, which in turn led to the Swiss Reformation. Jacques Le Fevre, Pierre Olivetan, and John Calvin all had deeply personal encounters with the Word of God that then led them to become proponents of the French Reformation. The list goes on and on.