These were all commended for their faith, yet none of them received what
had been promised… Hebrews 11:39
Our Open Doors colleague, Ron Boyd-MacMillan, shares the following insight
from his teaching, “Why I Need to Encounter the Persecuted Church.”
It was early 1980’s in a village in Czechoslovakia, and I had just given the
pastor of a rural church a Bible in his own tongue. It was leather bound, with a
gold zipper, and was the first complete Bible he had held. I remember him
sniffing it, marveling at the leather smell, playing with the zip and being
almost afraid to touch the thin precious pages. Then he began to talk to the
members of the church. Pointing at me he said, “This gentleman is your heroic
spiritual ancestor. Every time the Bible comes into a culture, it is a threat,
and is opposed. So it takes men and women to risk all to bring it to us. This
man has taken such a risk.”
I was embarrassed, but he went on to say to me, “The Bible also came into
your culture. It was also a threat. Tell me, who are your heroic spiritual
ancestors?” I am ashamed to say I did not have a clear idea of who these men
were in my country of the United Kingdom.
So I returned to my country with his challenge ringing in my ears, “Find out
the story of how your Bible came to you, and you will discover your heroic
spiritual ancestors.”
What a dramatic story I uncovered. Full of spies, deaths and power politics.
I learned so much about John Wycliffe, the first man to translate the Bible into
English in the world of the 1300’s, when most clergy could not even recite the
Ten Commandments. He formed a cadre of guerilla preachers to comb the country,
with hand copied versions of the Bible, a book banned by Parliament. Wycliffe
died of a stroke from the strain.
In the 1500’s, William Tyndale benefited from the invention of the printing
press. He had to leave England to accomplish the task, never to return. At age
twenty-nine in 1524, he settled in Cologne, and by 1526 was ready to smuggle
6000 copies of the Bible in English into Britain. The whole British naval fleet
was put on alert, and boats were stopped and searched. First tens and then
hundreds of the Bibles got through. The bishop of London tried another tack. He
sought to buy the entire print run through an intermediary. His intention was to
burn them all. Tyndale got wind of it, and approved the sale, saying, “Oh he
will burn them. Well, I am the gladder, for I shall get the money from these
books, and the whole world shall cry out upon the burning of God’s Word.” And so
it was. He burned them, and Tyndale used the money to improve the translation
and print more…at the church’s expense.
Tyndale was captured by assassins and then strangled and burned in August
1536 for “heresy.” His last words were, “Lord, open the King of England’s eyes.”
This prayer was swiftly answered, and the English reformation was quickly fueled
by a spate of translations. What a story it was. And what heroism from my
spiritual ancestors!
RESPONSE: Today I will thank God for my spiritual ancestors who brought
God’s Word to my land.
PRAYER: Ask God if you may somehow, someday, be used to bring His Word to
needy people.
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