WEDNESDAY PRAYERS(PIWC)29/09/2021
THEME: WITNESSING
The Greek word for witness
is martus.
Proverbs 11:30 (NKJV)
The fruit of the
righteous is a tree of life, And he who wins souls is wise.
This quotation is
reminding us there are professional work like Teachers, Pastor's social workers, etc ..
Are also, wise people.
Looking at this article shows that
every Christian has an obligation to evangelize and that God creates opportunities for the spread of the
gospel.
Acts 5:42 (NKJV)
And daily in the temple,
and in every house, they did not cease teaching and preaching Jesus as the
Christ.
What does it mean to be Chris's
witness?
1 John 1:3 (NKJV) That
which we have seen and heard we declare to you, that you also may
have fellowship with
us; and truly our fellowship is with
the Father and with His So Jesus Christ.
The witness is someone that
has seen something take place and is there to tell of all that they saw, heard, and experienced.
John 14:27 (nkjv)
27 Peace I leave with you, My
peace I give to you; not as the world gives do I give to you. Let not your
heart be troubled, neither let it be afraid.
John 17:22(njkv)
22 And the glory which You gave Me I have given
them, that they may be one just as We are one:
The witness is someone that
has seen something take place and is there to tell of all that they saw, heard, and experienced.
Likewise, as
Christians, we are called to be witnesses for Christ who present testimony about the truth that we have experienced and heard.
William Tyndale, the man
who translated the Bible into English and was burnt alive at the ridiculously
young age of 42 years old, for his efforts. (Google Foxe's Book of Martyrs.)
Nearly 500 years ago,
this week, William Tyndale, fondly called 'Father of the English Bible' was
strangled and burned at the stake after being tried and convicted of heresy and
reason for translating the Bible into English.
HIS OFFENSE!
He translated the Greek
Bible into English.
That you have a Bible in
a language you can read is largely due to his labors, and many of the very
phrases you read in it retain the flavor of his understanding of Greek and
Hebrew.
A graduate of Oxford and
Cambridge, Tyndale had a powerful desire to make the Bible available even to
the common people in England, in order to correct the 'Biblical ignorance of
the priests.' At one point Tyndale told a priest, "If God spares my life,
are many years pass, I will cause a boy that driveth the plow, shall know more
of the Scriptures than thou dost."
Today, 90% of the King
James Version of the Holy Bible and 75% of the Revised Standard Version are
from the translation made by Tyndale, a man to whom you owe more than you'll
ever know.
A nice dream, but how
was Tyndale to accomplish his task, when translating the Bible into English was
ILLEGAL at the time?'
He went to London to ask
Bishop Tunstall if he could be authorized to make an English translation of the
Bible, but the Bishop would not grant his approval.
However, Tyndale would
not let the disapproval of men stop him from carrying out what seemed so
obviously God's will. With encouragement and support of some British merchants,
he decided to go to Europe to complete his translation, then have it printed
and smuggled back into England.
In 1524 Tyndale sailed
for Germany. In Hamburg, he worked on the New Testament, and in Cologne, he
found a printer who would print the work. However, news of Tyndale's activity
came to an opponent of the Reformation who had the press raided.
Tyndale himself managed
to escape with the pages already printed and made his way to the German city
Worms where the New Testament was soon published.
Six thousand copies were
printed and smuggled into England.
The Bishops did
everything they could to eradicate the Bibles. Bishop Tunstall had copies
ceremoniously burned at St. Paul's; the Archbishop of Canterbury bought up copies
to destroy them. Tyndale used the money to print improved editions!
Tyndale continued hiding
among the merchants in Antwerp and began translating the Old Testament while
the King's agents searched all over England and Europe for him.
A copy of Tyndale's
"The Obedience of a Christian Man" fell into the hands of Henry VIII,
providing the king with the rationale to break the Church in England from the
Roman Catholic Church in 1534.
In 1535, Tyndale was
arrested and jailed in the castle of Vilvoorde (Filford) outside Brussels for
over a year.
Tyndale’s work was
denounced by authorities of the Roman Catholic Church and Tyndale himself was
accused of heresy.
Tyndale, 42 was finally
found by an Englishman who pretended to be his friend but then turned him over
to the authorities. After a year and a half in prison, he was brought to trial
for heresy -- FOR BELIEVING, among other things, IN THE FORGIVENESS OF SINS and
that THE MERCY OFFERED IN THE GOSPEL WAS ENOUGH FOR SALVATION. In August 1536,
he was condemned and was executed [burned alive at the stake] publicly on
October 6, 1536, in a small town in Belgium.
As he burnt to death,
Tyndale reportedly said "Lord, open the King of England's eyes."
WAS HIS PRAYER ANSWERED?
YES! The prayer was
answered first in part when three years later, in 1539, Henry VIII required
every parish church in England to make a copy of the English Bible available to
its parishioners. Today, Tyndale's prayer is fully answered, not only are the
King's eyes opened but the Bible a universal instrument.
* In 1611, the 54
scholars who produced the King James Bible drew significantly from Tyndale, as
well as from translations that descended from his.
* In 2002, Tyndale was
placed at number 26 in the BBC's poll of the 100 Greatest Britons; but in
heaven, he surely would be before the preceding 25.
A very important and
interesting piece of history worth knowing and appreciating by all believers.
And may it *challenge*
us to spend quality time in this same glorious book that this great servant
literally gave his life for.
Today it's hard to
imagine the world without an English Bible, and there could now be as many as
900 of such translations in existence – but before Tyndale, it had never
happened. He's known as the Father of the English Bible since the later,
epochal work of the King James Version of the Bible largely consisted of
Tyndale's scholarly and accessible translations.
The English language, as
with scholarly understanding, continues to evolve – and so the work of Bible
translation continues today.
But without the courage
and genius of men like Tyndale, who challenged the status quo before them and
died for doing so, it might never have been possible.
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