Why the Bible is a Bestseller.

businesscard-3.5inx2in-h-frontThe Bible is the world’s best sold book but search the best seller lists and you won’t find it anywhere, top to bottom.

It makes you wonder. If it’s a best seller why isn’t it on the list? Well, the answer is simple.

The annual sales figures for the Bible are so high, averaging between $425m and $650m, repeatedly – year after year – that it dwarfs the sales of all other books. The best any other book can hope for is second place and a very distant second place at that.

A list of “best sellers” is interesting only if the top spot is up for grabs so the real best seller had to give way to all the rest.

The Harry Potter series, which has enjoyed high volume sales in recent years, is a good example. According to The New Yorker even books with Harry Potter stature don’t compete well with the Bible. Not only is the Bible the best seller of all time it continues to be the best seller every year even when compared to the astounding sales figures of a series like Harry Potter.

Guinness Records reports an estimated 2.5 billion Bibles were printed between 1815 and 1975 and The Economist estimates more than 100m new Bibles are printed every year making a staggering total of over 6 billion in print. The New Yorker also pointed out that in 2005 the number of Bibles sold in the US alone was conservatively estimated at 25 million and Barna research indicates that 92% of all American households have at least one Bible and typically own three. That means most of the 25m Bibles are being sold to homes that already have at least one and likely more.

By comparison the Harry Potter series – 7 books in all – sold only 400 million copies total and no one expects it to keep pace. Also, there is nothing to suggest it will become a classic or that existing owners are buying second, third or even fourth copies of each book in the series.

Other interesting comparisons include Mao’s book of quotations which has sold over 900 million copies in a comparatively short time, since 1966, and the Qur’an which became popular in recent years but there are big differences in the way these two books compare to the Bible.

Not only does the Bible continue to enjoy annually increasing sales and distribution totals, it does so strictly without coercion. No one is required to buy, own, read or believe the Bible. In fact, in countries heavily influenced by the Bible, freedom reigns. People who don’t believe are free to disagree with it publicly if they wish. They can swear at God, find fault with the Bible, disagree with those who believe it and debate the issues without worry.

All of that is to say that Bible influenced countries are open. The same can’t be said for Mao’s book or the Qur’an.

When Mao’s book came into print every home in China was required to have a copy and that regulation was enforced for many years. The penalty for not owning the book was severe and the Chinese population, being so large, accounts for several hundred million copies. The penalty for owning a Bible, by the way, was worse. One book was banned, the other required reading but in spite of the ban, Bible distribution is catching up with Mao’s book even in China.

Like Mao’s book, the Qur’an’s popularity is also the result of enforcement policies. It is used heavily in the educational systems of Muslim countries and doesn’t only influence law making, it is the law. Based on its teachings, some are disallowed an education and it influences many areas of public life also: what people wear, what they eat and how they interact socially and politically.

Some countries sponsor contests to see who can quote the Qur’an verbatim. You do find pockets of Christians in Muslim countries but they are persecuted regularly. There can be severe penalties (beating, imprisonment and the like) for owning a Bible and converting to Christianity is even worse.

All of that is to say that Mao’s book of quotes and the Qur’an enjoy high print volumes due to political and cultural enforcements. The Bible, however, has never enjoyed the same kind of promotion.

In 600 AD the Bible was restricted to only Latin and anyone who refused to accept this dictum and made an effort to translate it into any language other than Latin was persecuted and in some cases executed. Common language Bibles were not meant for the masses.

The Bible has never been an easy book to own.

John Wycliffe, who outspokenly differed with the organized church on many issues, was one of the first to translate the Bible into English. Although he died of natural causes, he was persecuted while he lived and pronounced a heretic several years after his death. To broadcast his judgment, his remains were exhumed in 1428, crushed, burned and thrown into the River Swift. His writings were also burned and scattered.

William Tyndale was the first to translate the Bible into English in 1526 directly from Hebrew and Greek. His New Testament was also the first English translation to be printed using moveable type and for his efforts, he was executed by strangling and burned at the stake along with as many of his Bibles as could be confiscated.

It wasn’t until 1611 that the first “authorized” (allowed) version of the Bible was produced. This translation is known today mostly as the King James Version. Even though the Bible has been translated, published, read, studied, analyzed, bought, sold and given away freely since then, particularly in the English speaking world, it is still banned in many communities.

But in spite of the bans and the persecution the Bible still enjoys the greatest popularity of any book ever produced in human language. Although atheistic, the Chinese government has allowed the distribution of more than 50m Bibles in their country. Why? Popular demand! The government couldn’t stop the supply of Bibles so they decided to slow it down by restricting the allowed number. More than twice the 50m are needed and Bibles are still being smuggled into the country illegally.

The Bible’s popularity is not based on clever marketing, cultural trends or legislation. It is based on the desire to know God and its availability is made possible by the efforts of many determined people, now and in the past, and the miraculous intervention of God.

Obnoxious believers should understand that Bible truth is not like rocks or catch phrases. You don’t have to throw it at people.

And for those who oppose it, remember this. No one has to own a Bible. No one has to read a Bible or understand so don’t waste your time trying to oppose it.

The Bible Sells Best Because
It Is Living, Powerful and
Universally Desired

12  For the word of God is alive and powerful. It is sharper than the sharpest two-edged sword, cutting between soul and spirit, between joint and marrow. It exposes our innermost thoughts and desires.  Hebrews 4:12 (NLT)

www.RidgeFellowship.com

Source:  Adapted from http://nowthinkaboutit.com/2012/06/why-the-bible-is-the-true-best-seller/

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The WORD Became Flesh

businesscard-3.5inx2in-h-front14  So the Word became human and made his home among us. He was full of unfailing love and faithfulness. And we have seen his glory, the glory of the Father’s one and only Son.  John 1:14 (NLT)

A grandfather was visiting his grandson one Christmas when he walked into the family room and saw the toddler standing up in his playpen, crying. His face was red and tear-stained. When little Jeffry saw his granddad, his face lit up and his hands reached out for help as he pleaded, “Out, papa, out!” What grandfather could resist this plea? And so he walked over to the playpen and reached down to lift his little buddy out of captivity.

Just then, however, “Law and Order” stepped into the room with a dishtowel in her hand and spoke sternly, “Jeffry, you know better. You’re being punished. Leave him right there, dad.” And she marched back out of the room.

The grandfather didn’t know what to do. Jeffry’s tears and outstretched hands tugged at his heart, but he didn’t want to interfere with a mother’s discipline either. He couldn’t stand being in the same room and not being able to do anything but he couldn’t leave without feeling like a traitor.

Grandpa then had an idea. Since he couldn’t take Jeffry out of the playpen, he decided to climb in with him. That’s a pretty good picture of what Jesus did for us…He climbed in with us.

The first part of verse 14 says that the “Word became flesh…” One of the most unique qualities of Christianity that makes it different from any other religion: God became flesh. Jesus is the visible word of God. Theologians call this truth the Incarnation. The infinite second person of the Trinity, who created all things according to John 1:1, became a tiny helpless baby. That’s a staggering thought. The Son did not cease to be God when He became a man. He added manhood but He did not subtract deity. He was fully God and fully man. He was the God-man.

For many years I thought that Jesus got his start when He was born. The fact is that Jesus Christ has always existed according to verses John 1:1-2: “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. He was with God in the beginning.” Jesus is before the beginning of time as He said in John 8:58: “Before Abraham was born, I am.” He is eternal, or infinite because He has always existed. This passage immediately reminds us of the opening words of Genesis 1:1: “In the beginning God…”

The word “word” is the Greek “logos,” which refers to Jesus Christ, the second member of the Trinity. In Greek culture, logos, was that which gave meaning to all things. The philosopher Philo saw the logos as a bridge between a transcendent God and the material universe. John is using a term that everyone would be familiar with and yet he expands and transcends its meaning. Since a word is an audible or visible expression of a thought, Jesus perfectly revealed what was going on in the mind of God. He’s the bridge between God and us.

I am trying my best to covey to you the thoughts that are on my mind, and the only medium I can use are my words. Likewise, Jesus is God’s Word to us. In Revelation 1:8, Jesus declares that He is the “Alpha and Omega,” which is like saying He is the A through the Z, the beginning and the end. He is God’s alphabet, the one who spells out deity for us. As the final Word, Jesus makes the incomprehensible God intelligible.

The “Word was with God,” indicates that Jesus Christ existed in a face-to-face relationship with the Father. Jesus was not only in the closest possible fellowship with God, the “Word was God.” We don’t have time this morning to explore the majestic intricacies of the doctrine of the Trinity, but suffice it to say that Jesus is not a creation of God, but is God Himself. Verse 2 summarizes and repeats verse 1 in order to make sure we grasp the magnitude of this truth: “He was with God in the beginning.” The Infant is Infinite.

The Message translation renders the first part of John 1:14 this way: “The word became flesh and blood and moved into the neighborhood.” For 33 years God moved into our neighborhood. The NIV says that Jesus “made his dwelling among us,” which literally means, “to make one’s tent.”

When I was in Boy Scouts and we would camp at campsites, we would always get to know the other campers around us. In fact, it’s difficult to be private when you’re camping. Everyone can see what you’re doing. To say that Jesus pitched a tent implies that He wants to be on familiar terms with us. He wants to be close. He wants a lot of interaction.

What other religion do you know whose God comes in person to die for his people? Buddha did not claim to be God, nor did he claim to have come from God. He was in search of the divine principle — the word become word. And neither did Mohammed claim to be God, only a prophet of God and author of the Koran. In all of the other world religions we have the word become word — a verbal revelation: writings, injunctions and moral codes. Only in Christianity does the Word become flesh. Even the Jews have only the word becoming word — the prophets and the law of Moses. In Jesus Christ, God did not just reveal his will or his laws, he revealed himself. Nothing less would do.

If the Word only became word then our contact with God would only be intellectual. But the Word has become flesh, and now he is personal. The Word is standing in front of us and he is calling our name. As we read the Bible we are not just acquiring knowledge, Jesus begins to emerge from the Scripture. Suddenly, we are reading more than words, we are experiencing a person. Something real is happening. More than our thinking is being affected, we are being touched and changed at the deepest place of our beings. It is not an idea (the Word) coming into our heads, it is one person communicating with another person (flesh). The Scriptures come alive, because the Word has become flesh. Jesus steps out of the pages and into our lives.

Soren Kierkegaard, the great Danish theologian of another century, tells the story of a prince who was running an errand for his father one day in the local village. As he did so, he passed through a very poor section of the town. Looking through the window of his carriage, he saw a beautiful young peasant girl walking along the street. He could not get her off his heart. He continued to come to the town, day after day, just to see her and to feel as though he was near her. His heart yearned for her, but there was a problem. How could he develop a relationship with her? He could order her to marry him. It was in his power to do so. But he wanted this girl to love him from the heart, willingly. He could put on his royal garments and impress her with his regal entourage, and drive up to her front door with soldiers and a carriage drawn by six horses. But if he did this he would never be certain that the girl loved him or was simply overwhelmed with his power, position and wealth. The prince came up with another solution. As you may have guessed, he gave up his kingly robe and symbols of power and privilege. He moved into the village dressed only as a peasant. He lived among the people, shared their interests and concerns, and talked their language. In time, the young peasant girl grew to know him, and then to love him.

This is what Jesus has done for us. The Word became flesh. The King of heaven put aside his heavenly robes and divine prerogatives. He came to us as one of us. He lived among us; ate with us; drank with us; felt with us — all to win our love. He could have forced us. He could have overwhelmed us, but he chose to romance us. He stands here today with the smile of love and arms extended. He is the God who became real so that we could experience his transforming love. Jesus is not just a truth to believe in, he is a person to be experienced.  I pray you experience Christ this Christmas season.

Darrell

www.RidgeFellowship.com

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WORD! Living and Powerful

businesscard-3.5inx2in-h-frontFor the word of God is living and powerful, and sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing even to the division of soul and spirit, and of joints and marrow, and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart.NKJV   Hebrews 4:12

How is this word of God, the Bible, “living and powerful”? The word of God is not simply a collection of God’s words, a vehicle for communicating ideas; it is living, life changing, and dynamic as it works in us. The demands of the word of God require decisions. We not only listen to it, we let it shape our lives. Because the word of God is living, it applied to these first-century Jewish Christians, and it applies as well as to Christians today. The word of God lives, and it gives life to those who believe—energizing this present life and promising eternal life. Most books may appear to be dusty artifacts just sitting on a shelf, but the word of God collected in Scripture vibrates with life. The Pharisees imagined that the word of God was a set of static rules, and modern critics have argued that the word of God is nothing more than an archival record of a nation. Both groups have erred. The word of God—living and powerful—breathes life for people today. God reaches out to those who look into its pages, calling them to life, meeting their needs, expressing their deepest emotions, offering answers to their greatest questions.

God will discern whether or not we make every effort (4:11) and whether or not we have truly come to faith in Christ; nothing can be hidden from God. We may fool ourselves or other Christians with our spiritual lives, but we cannot deceive God. He knows who we really are because the word of God is living and powerful. Does this “word” refer to Jesus or to Scripture? While Jesus Christ is called “the Word” (John 1:1) who came as God’s ultimate communication to humanity, the comparison with a sharp sword indicatesthat “the word of God” here more likely refers to God’s revelation in the Bible. Only in the Gospel of John (1:1) and in Revelation (19:13) is Jesus called “the Word.”

The Scriptures were not given to increase our knowledge but to change our lives.

D. L. Moody

 

The word of God cannot to be taken for granted or disobeyed. The Israelites who rebelled (described at length in previous verses) learned the hard way that when God speaks, they must listen. Going against God means facing judgment and death.

The word of God penetrates through our outer facade and reveals what lies deep inside. The metaphor of a two-edged sword pictures the word of God, like a knife, revealing who we really are on the inside. It discerns what is within us, both good and evil. It penetrates the core of our moral and spiritual lives. This “two-edged sword” pictures the sharp, short sword that the Roman soldiers used in close combat. The sword’s double edges made it ideal for “cut and thrust” warfare. The word of God, sharper than a two-edged sword, pierces even to the division of soul and spirit, and of joints and marrow. These words develop the metaphor; they are not a commentary on people’s physiological or spiritual makeup. Nothing can be hidden from God; neither can we hide from ourselves if we sincerely study the word of God. It reaches deep past our outer life as a knife passes through skin. It delves deep into our inner lives, and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart. The word translated “is a discerner” can also be translated “judges” (niv). At this point, our thoughts, motives, attitudes, and intentions are shown to us as being good or evil; we cannot escape God’s judgment on them and we dare not ignore God’s warning to us. We cannot keep secrets from God.

 LIFE APPLICATION  – THE SECRET YOU
Who really knows you?
Maybe you think your best friend knows the real you. But does this person know how jealous you are of his or her talents, career, or good looks? Does he or she hear your bickering and your put-downs that try to equalize your popularity with his or hers?
Maybe your spouse knows you. But does your spouse know all about your past, your moral weakness, your caving in to crowd pressure? Can he or she read your thoughts about all the other handsome men or pretty women who cross your path and divert your fancy?
Maybe no human knows you that well. But God does. God’s way of talking to you about your secret thoughts—and helping you confront them—is his word, the Bible. The Bible, opened to you through the work of the Holy Spirit, is your clearest mirror and strongest counsel. Read the Bible and see for yourself. Study the Bible and learn about yourself and God. Apply the Bible and change your life.

4:13 Nothing in all creation is hidden from God’s sight. Everything is uncovered and laid bare before the eyes of him to whom we must give account.NIV This verse reiterates the truth expressed in 4:12. God sees everything. Nothing in all creation (literally “no creature”) is hidden from God’s sight. No one can hide anything from God. He sees every thought, intention, and attitude—no matter how secretly these are held; he sees every deed—no matter how secretly it was accomplished. Two thoughts are presented by the phrase “everything is uncovered and laid bare.” (1) We are naked before God. We cannot give excuses, justifications, or reasons—everything is seen for exactly what it is. No one can deceive God. (2) We are exposed, powerless, and defenseless before God. The word refers to the paralyzing grip of a wrestler in a choke hold.

The word of God penetrates like a sword (4:12), exposing us to God himself, to whom we must give account. All people must give an account to God, but without trappings and rationalizations. The Bible speaks about this fact in many places. For example, see the following verses (quoted from the nrsv):

  • Psalm 62:12—”And steadfast love belongs to you, O Lord. For you repay to all according to their work.”
  • Matthew 16:27—”For the Son of Man is to come with his angels in the glory of his Father, and then he will repay everyone for what has been done.”
  • Acts 17:31—”Because he has fixed a day on which he will have the world judged in righteousness by a man whom he has appointed, and of this he has given assurance to all by raising him from the dead.”
  • Romans 2:16—”On the day when, according to my gospel, God, through Jesus Christ, will judge the secret thoughts of all.”
  • 1 Corinthians 4:4—”I am not aware of anything against myself, but I am not thereby acquitted. It is the Lord who judges me.”

These words give warning that believers must be careful not to drift away, but to obey God wholeheartedly. God is the final Judge. This verse paves the way for the following section describing Jesus Christ as our High Priest. With our lives laid bare before God, we would be hopelessly lost without Christ. Because he took our judgment and serves as our advocate with God, we can rest secure with God.

 LIFE APPLICATION – HIDE AND SEEK
Nothing can be hidden from God. He knows about everyone everywhere, and everything about us is wide open to his all-seeing eyes. God sees all we do and knows all we think. Even when we are unaware of his presence, he is there. When we try to hide from him, he sees us. We can have no secrets from God. Can your Christian life stand the test? Is your faith living and real?

For more about the series WORD! go to http://www.RidgeFellowship.com
Source: Life Application Bible Commentary – Life Application Bible Commentary – Hebrews.

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WORD! How Did We Get It?

businesscard-3.5inx2in-h-frontLet’s talk about how God brought His written word to us that we now refer to as the bible.  In approximately 1400-1500 BC:, God, Himself, wrote the Ten Commandments on stone ancient form of Hebrew called Paleo Hebrew.  God gave the Ten Commandments to Moses on the top of Mount Sinai, and God began recording His word to us. Exodus 34:27 records, 27 Then the LORD said to Moses, “Write down these words, for in accordance with these words I have made a covenant with you and with Israel.”  (NIV)

Moses recorded the first five books in the Old Testament which were the first scriptures, known as the Pentateuch.  They are:  Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy.  Since Moses grew up in an Egyptian palace, he knew how to write and probably wrote on Papyrus, a thick paper made from the reed like plant that grew around Egypt.  In time God’s Word was recorded on animal skins called parchment that were made into scrolls.  A scribe might use the animal skin of a cow, or a sheep.  The entire Old Testament on a scroll is called a Torah. A Torah scroll, if it would be completely unraveled, would be over 150 feet in distance.  The scroll was so long that it would often take an entire herd of sheep just to make one Torah scroll.

By approximately 500 B.C., the thirty-nine books that we know today as the Old Testament were completed and continued to be preserved in Hebrew on scrolls.

By the end of the First Century A.D., the New Testament was completed, and it was preserved in the Greek language on parchment or papyrus. In the year 367 A.D., the Bishop of Alexandria, Athenasius, wrote his Easter letter and in it, he listed all of the books that we read today in the New Testament.  Then in the year 393 A.D., the African senate of Hippo approved all of the books that you find listed as your New Testament today.

By the year 500 A.D., the Bible had been translated into over 500 different languages.  People all over were so thankful, because they could read God’s word in their own language.  But then, something very unusual happened.  In just the next century, the next one hundred years, by the year 600 A.D. the Bible was only allowed in one language, Latin.  Why? The Catholic Church of Rome, at the time, was the only recognized church in the land, they issued a decree that no Bible in any other language was allowed.  If anyone had a Bible in any language besides Latin, that person would be executed.  Unfortunately, the Catholic Church became very corrupt.  The priests were the only one educated in the Latin language so that the common person could never read God’s word.  That gave the priests ultimate power.  They could teach what parts of the Bible they wanted to, and they could even throw in some things that weren’t in the Bible at all.  In that day it was common for a person to pay for indulgences or paying for forgiveness.  If they sinned, they’d pay a certain amount of money and the priest would say, “Because you’ve paid that, now you are forgiven.”  The Catholic Church also taught about a place called purgatory, a word that’s not found in scripture, but they said if your relative dies, they go to purgatory,  but for a certain amount of money, you can purchase the freedom for your relative from purgatory.   The priests used this forced ignorance, and between the years 400 A.D. and 1400 A.D. they deceived the masses during a 1,000-year period, which became known as the Dark Ages.

How did the church break free from this long season of dark and horrible corruption? The answer is simple.  Once the Bible, the truth of God’s word, got in the hands of enough people and the right people, God used His truth through people to bring about the very necessary reformation of the church.  In the year 563 A.D., there was a guy named Columba who started a secret Bible society, or a Bible school, where they could faithfully teach God’s word, and this group of people became the remnant on earth where God’s word was taught faithfully century after century after century.  The students were known as the Culdee’s and for 700 years, they would disciple one another and they faithfully studied God’s word.  It was out of this group that God raised up the right people to bring about the reformation.

In 1380 John Wycliff was the very first to translate the Bible into the English language.  When he did so, all of a sudden, all these people who before couldn’t read God’s Word were now able to do so.  At this time, some say that it would take about ten months to translate one single Bible.  For ten months people would work to get the Bible translated into English.  He was faithful in spreading God’s word, but unfortunately, he was called a heretic, and forty-four years after his death, the pope ordered Wycliffe’s bones to be dug up, ground to powder and be spread across the river.  Some people say that Wycliffe was actually the morning star of the reformation.  He was the one that God used to start the ball rolling in the very necessary reformation of the church.

Wycliffe’s work and writings influenced a man named John Hus, and Hus was equally passionate about getting God’s word into as many hands of people as possible.  Unfortunately, Hus too, was called a heretic and was burned at the stake in 1415.  They used Wycliff’s Bibles to start the fire around Hus as they burned him at the stake .  It was Hus’ final words that became known as a prophecy that helped direct the future of the church.  “In the next one hundred years, God will raise up a man who’s call for reform cannot be suppressed.”  And that’s exactly what God did.

In the year 1517, God raised up the man named Martin Luther a priest who was fed up with all of the corruption in the church.  He strongly believed that God was calling him to help reform the church.  On All Hallows Eve Martin Luther took what became known as his Ninety-five Theses.  It was a document with ninety-five disagreements or needed reformations.  He went and he nailed it to the door of the Wittenburg church.  People now describe that event as the knock that was heard around the world.  God used those accusations of heresy to spark what’s become known as the reformation of the protestant church.  God also used Martin Luther to take the Bible and to translate it into the German language.  He then took the recent invention called the printing press, the invention of Gutenberg, and established it to now get the Bible into the hands of the masses.  Of course, Luther was called a heretic.  People wanted to kill him, and he had to spend much of his life on the run, but God used him to spark major changes in the church and to get the word of God into the hands of the masses.

About that same time, there was another guy, an Oxford professor, his name was John Colet, and he translated the Bible into English for his Oxford students.  He also taught the Bible in the English language at Saint Paul’s Cathedral in London. Over 20,000 people would pack themselves into this cathedral simply to hear the word of God in a language that they could understand.  Not only were 20,000 people in the building, but it was said that as many people would be outside the building waiting for their turn to get in.  Why?  Because they were hungry, desperate and would do anything to simply hear the word of God.  What’s sad is that beautiful historic cathedral still exists today, but instead of over 20,000 people a weekend, they minister to about 200 people a weekend, and most of these are tourists.

In the year 1526, William Tyndale printed the very first English Bible.  That’s the good news.  The bad news is, anyone who was caught with this illegal Bible would be executed immediately.  You could only imagine what demand there would be for people that read English and wanted to read God’s word in the language that they could understand.  They would do almost anything to get God’s word into their hands.  These people, they were incredibly creative and would often smuggle Bibles into England, using all sorts of different means.  Occasionally, they put Bibles in bales of cotton to smuggle them in, or other times, they’d put Bibles into bags full of flour.  Ironically, the biggest buyers of Tyndale’s Bibles were actually the king’s men.  That’s right, the king’s men would buy up as many English Bibles as they could, not because they wanted to read them, but instead, because they wanted to burn and destroy all of Tyndale’s Bibles.  Well, Tyndale, he was a good businessman, and he would simply take the profits of all of these Bibles the king’s men would buy and he would use the money to print even more Bibles to get the word of God out.  Unfortunately, because what he was doing was considered illegal, Tyndale was on the run for eleven years of his life.

Imagine waking up every single morning, knowing that people were hunting you down, wanting to kill you simply because you wanted to help other people experience the word of God.  That’s what Tyndale experienced.  Day after day, week after week, month after month, year after year, he was on the run, running for his life because people wanted to execute him.  Sadly, they eventually caught up to him and incarcerated him for about five hundred days before they finally decided in the year 1536 to burn him at the stake.  His last words, though, were a prayer to God, which people will remember forever.  He prayed, “Oh, Lord, open the eyes of the King of England,” and three years later in 1539, God answered that prayer.  Not only did the King of England allow the printing of the Bible in the English language, but he actually helped to fund it, setting the word of God free.

*Think about this.   Remember all the people who died, gave their lives fighting with everything in them to help God’s living and active word be available to you.

For more about the series WORD! Go to www.RidgeFellowship.com

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