People died because of a book. Simply for reading it. Simply for translating it. Simply for holding it in their hands. In medieval Europe, the Bible was a forbidden text. Ordinary people caught reading it faced execution. The church and state joined forces to keep this book out of the hands of the people. Why?… Continue reading The Bible Is Revolutionary — The Book That Made Kings Tremble
Tag: Reformation
Until the Bible Was in Our Hands — Those Who Risked Their Lives to Pass On the Word
“If God spare my life, ere many years I will cause a boy who drives the plough to know more of the Scriptures than you do.” These were the words William Tyndale hurled at a clergyman of his day. It was a reckless declaration. In that era, translating the Bible into one’s native tongue was… Continue reading Until the Bible Was in Our Hands — Those Who Risked Their Lives to Pass On the Word
The Church Is His Body
“The church, which is his body, the fullness of him who fills all in all.” — Ephesians 1:23 (ESV) What is the church? The question presses upon us today with a peculiar urgency. Some think of the church as a building they visit on Sunday mornings. Others identify it with a denomination, or simply as… Continue reading The Church Is His Body
Gutenberg’s Printing Press and Divine Providence: How the Word Changed the World
One Lead Type Overturned History In a workshop in Mainz, Germany, in the 1450s, Johannes Gutenberg (1398–1468) drew inspiration from a wine press, arranged metal type, and applied ink to paper. The result, completed around 1455, was the Gutenberg Bible — the forty-two-line Bible. To modern eyes, it may appear to be nothing more than… Continue reading Gutenberg’s Printing Press and Divine Providence: How the Word Changed the World
Why Sola Scriptura? The Case for Scripture Alone
There was a thousand years of silence. Ordinary believers in medieval Europe had never held a Bible in their hands. The Scriptures, written in Latin, belonged exclusively to the clergy. Worship was conducted in a language no one could understand, and salvation could only be obtained by following the procedures prescribed by the Church. To… Continue reading Why Sola Scriptura? The Case for Scripture Alone
What Does “The Righteous Shall Live by Faith” Mean?
This single sentence from Romans 1:17 — rooted in Habakkuk 2:4 — pierced Martin Luther’s heart and ignited the flame of the Reformation. But do we truly understand what it means? First, We Need to Clear Up a Misunderstanding Many people think of faith this way: “If I believe hard enough, if my faith is… Continue reading What Does “The Righteous Shall Live by Faith” Mean?
A Thousand Years of the Forbidden Book — Why Did the Church Hide the Bible?
1. The Core Issue: Not a “Ban” but “Control” To be precise, the medieval Catholic Church did not completely forbid the Bible. On the contrary, Scripture was the Church’s most sacred text. However, the Church strictly controlled who could read it, in what language, and with what interpretation. Understanding the structure of that control is… Continue reading A Thousand Years of the Forbidden Book — Why Did the Church Hide the Bible?
Chains Broken, History Changed — John Knox and the Scottish Reformation
1. Scotland: The Land Where Reform Blazed When we trace the deep roots of the Reformation, our journey naturally leads us to Scotland. While Luther proclaimed in Germany and Calvin taught in Switzerland, it was John Knox (c. 1514–1572) who blazed like fire in Scotland. He was no mere theorist. Even chained as a slave… Continue reading Chains Broken, History Changed — John Knox and the Scottish Reformation