Broughtatgreatprice I’ve done some on both. I’ve never come across any damaging evidence about Tyndale.. but on Martin Luther. Well what can I say. In one of his biographies whilst riding upon a horse one day I was beseeched by a brood of demons chasing me. And of course Martin had this habitual habit of reminding his readers whilist siting upon the stool contemplating his thought's about doctrinal matters. If I were a drinking lady one might think upon Swollowing the entire contents of the liquor upon such thoughts. But that still doesn’t take away that all he wanted to do was reform the church with his 95 thesis’s. Instead they excommunicated him.
View attachment 366205 You than speak of the enlightenment era and how it coincides with the reformation. You’re saying that it infiltrated the reformation. In some ways it did. Even more in so in the 1800’s with the likes of Nelson Darby and Cyrus Schofield the Jehovah witnesses and Mormons to name a few . But what of the infiltration of the Roman Catholic that had begun much further down . At least according to all these Roman Catholic authors. perhaps they and I are not as unenlightened as you think. They remained Catholic but they in no way paint their church red pink rosy as you do.
View attachment 366206View attachment 366207View attachment 366208 Father Chiniquy was a little different he left Rome
View attachment 366209 Broughtatgreatprice when seeking enlightenment Mystery Babylon Does not discriminate where she makes her home be it the left or the right . Enquire within. Enlightened ones welcome. But not for all. Yours Kathleen
You make a false statement about me. I do not paint the Church’s history as rosy and pink. That can easily be explained by infiltration, which Our Lord said would happen in the parable of the wheat and the tares. That does not delegitimize the Church’s existence.
If Luther only wanted to reform the Church, then why did he find it necessary to change the Bible to fit his theology? He used the printing press more as a gossip column than reasoned debate or dissent.
Tyndale wrote a faulty translation. If he didn’t, then why is his translation not used today. It was a very poor scholarly work in line with the JW new world translation
Have you read Exurge Donine? The Pope’s rebuttal to Luther’s claims? Have you read the 95 theses? Do you know what either of these documents say and why you agree or disagree with them? If not, then you need to suspend your judgement until you do, else you are defying Jesus’ teaching and judging on gossip. Is that what you want to be used to judge you, gossip? Really?
To judge the Church, we must judge her teaching, not the claims of disgruntled members
I would not want to be judged by the gossip against me, why would you insist on being judged by yours? You must be confident that your reputation will spare you, I need a little more mercy than that.
Tyndale did not just want to translate the Bible into English, he changed words to fit his personal theology instead of accurately translating the Bible. Luther added words to the Bible where they not. In order to fit his personal theology also
Translating scripture is one thing, changing the meaning for personal reasons is another
It wasn’t the Catholic Church that executed Tyndale either. Henry VIII who had broken with the Church declared Tyndale’s translation illegal, and Tyndale was executed by secular authorities
The law against English translations came from Wycliffe translation that was so full of errors that it was banned
English translations were not illegal, they just had to be accurate translations, not altered translations written to deceive and sway public opinion