With an Introduction by
Priscilla Martin
William Tyndale is the finest English translator of the Bible, and
his New Testament one of the most influential works in English Literature.
As a young man in pre-Reformation England, where unauthorised translation
of the Bible was illegal, he heard a pompous divine claim that 'we
were better be without God's law than the Pope's'. Tyndale's answer
was: 'I defy the Pope and all his laws, and if God spares my life,
ere many years I will cause a boy that driveth the plough shall know
more of the scripture than thou dost'. Unable to do this in England,
he spent the rest of his life in exile on the Continent and was executed
as a heretic in 1536. His translations - of the entire New Testament
and much of the Old Testament - were smuggled into England, where an
eager public risked their lives to read them. His New Testament with
its clear, vivid style and resonant phrases, is a masterpiece of English
prose asnd was the basis of the Authorized Version of 1611.