Miles Cloverdale

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A BIBLE FOR EVERYONE

God Used Him to Bring The English Bible to England

Miles Coverdale was only four years old when Christopher Columbus discovered the New World in 1492.  Born in York, England, he graduated from Cambridge, was ordained into the priesthood in 1514, and soon became an Augustinian friar.  He belonged to a group of Cambridge scholars including William Tyndale, Thomas Cranmer, Hugh Latimer, and his prior, Robert Barnes, who met at the White Horse Tavern to discuss religious reform.  A friend described what Coverdale was like in those days:

    Under the mastership of Robert Barnes he drank in good learning with a
    burning thirst.  He was a young man of friendly and upright nature and 
    very gentle spirit, and when the Church of England revived, he was one
    of the first to make a pure profession of Christ.  Other men gave
    themselves in part, he gave himself wholly to propagating the truth of
    Jesus Christ’s gospel and manifesting his glory.

In 1528 after preaching against the mass, confession, and images, Coverdale was forced to leave the Augustinians.

During his time abroad from 1528 to 1535 he worked with Tyndale in Hamburg and Antwerp on translations of the Old Testament.  In October 1535 he published the first edition of his own Bible, in Marburg, Germany.

To prepare this first complete printed English Bible, Coverdale relied on the work of five translations, among them Tyndale’s.  The long dedication he wrote to Henry VIII and Queen Anne implies his expectation that the king would receive it favorably.  With customary humility, Coverdale wrote,

    Considering now, most gracious prince, the inestimable treasure, fruit 
    and prosperity everlasting that God giveth with his word, and trusting in
    his infinite goodness that he would bring my simple and rude labour 
    herein to good effect, therefore, as the Holy Ghost moved men to do the 
    cost hereof, so was I boldened in God to labour in the same….I do with
    all humbleness submit mine understanding and my poor translation unto 
    the spirit of truth in your grace, so make I this protestation, having God 
    to record in my conscience, that I have neither wrested not altered so
    much as one word for the maintenance of any manner of sect, but have
    with a clear conscience purely and faithfully translated this out of five
    sundry interpreters, having only the manifest truth of the scripture 
    before mine eyes.

Today’s bibles still retain some of his phrases, as well as the idea of chapter headings and of not including the Apocrypha with the other Old Testament books.  The Coverdale Bible was so well received that the king’s chancellor,

Thomas Cromwell, asked Coverdale to go to Paris to supervise the publication of an official Bible to be placed in every parish church in England.  Begun in Paris, this second Bible known as the Great Bible had to be finished in London when the inquisitor general of France forbade any further printing of the English Bible.  The Great Bible was presented to Henry VIII by Thomas Cromwell in 1539.  It proved to be Coverdale’s greatest achievement and had a significant influence on the translation of the King James Version in 1611.

Miles Coverdale died on January 20, 1569, having provided the English with Bibles in their own language.

Points of Reflection: 

Because God has revealed himself in the Bible in words, it is of utmost importance to be able to read those words in one’s own language in an accurate translation.  But the work of scholars such as Miles Coverdale accomplishes little unless we actually read and study the Bible to know what God is saying to us.  This is the very reason that God continually tells readers and students to study and mediate on the written word day and night.  (See Joshua 1 : 8)

“For assuredly, I say to you, till heaven and earth pass away, one jot or one tittle will by no means pass from the law till all is fulfilled.”     

                                                                           Matthew 5 : 18  NKJV

Learn Well The Lessons of History……………………..

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