TYNDALE’S VISION FOR ENGLAND
The 16th century was populated with some of the brightest minds in history; Luther, Calvin, Zwingli, Knox, Wishart, Latimer, Cranmer, Ridley, Farel…and fitting comfortably in this crowd of luminaries was William Tyndale; translator of the English Bible.
Tyndale was born in Gloucestershire in 1494 and grew up in the small village of North Nibley England, marked today by a monument atop a nearby hill. He was educated at Oxford, completing his BA in 1512 and his MA in 1515. While at Oxford Tyndale came across a copy of Erasmus’ translation of the New Testament which he read with interest. In Reading the Bible he found that while all of his intellectual pursuits thus far had served to invigorate his mind, the Bible alone was able to regenerate his heart. It was a significant turning point in his life and he began to preach the truths he had learned in the Bible at Oxford. However, Oxford was not ready to hear what Tyndale had to say about the Bible and he was forced to leave Oxford and move to Cambridge where he joined two other would-be Reformers: Thomas Bilney and John Frith.