Puritans and Protestants
Despite its best efforts to limit the common
person's access to the Bible, in the late Middle Ages, the Roman Catholic
Church found itself fighting a losing battle. Most of us know about the
Protestant Reformation in early 16th century, but efforts to spread "the
Word" actually began many centuries earlier.
Already by the 14th century, disgust with the decadence
and corruption of the Church began to create a grass-roots movement of
rebellion. One of the earliest acts of defiance was an attempt on the part of
several individuals to return the Christian world to its pure roots by
re-introducing the Bible to the common man. In both northern
The Bible is for the government of the people, by
the people and for the people. (1)
The people responsible for these
"illegal" translations were persecuted and a few of them, such as Jan
Hus of
New technology was also to play a major role in the
in the spread of the Bible. In 1453, in
The 16th century saw tremendous religious changes
in
In 1538 Henry VIII also broke away from Catholicism
and founded The Church of England. He issued a proclamation that a copy of the
Bible be placed in every Church in
Protestant theologians, realizing that the true
religious and ethical spirit of Christianity came from within the Bible (both
the Old and New Testaments) put strong emphasis on the individual's right and
responsibility to go directly to the Bible and use it as the moral guidebook.
As Martin Luther wrote
in a letter to Pope Leo: "... I cannot allow myself to be bound by
fixed rules for the interpretation of the Word of God, for the Word, which is
the source of all freedom, must itself be free." (2)
In countries allied with Protestantism, translation
and mass distribution of the Bible became a regular feature.
The decline in the power of the Church, the growth
of Protestantism with its strong emphasis on the Bible and the development of
the printing press all combined together to blast the Bible into a position of
unprecedented religious and political influence in
One of the best examples of the power of the Bible
in modern political development is the 17th century English Civil War known as
the Puritan Revolution. The Puritans, who were Protestant fundamentalists, were
also devout believers in the Bible. They felt that the Church of England was
not in keeping with the true religious spirit, which they believed included the
right of everyone to interpret God's law. They also rejected the absolutism of
the king, then Charles I. The Puritans felt that Parliament, and not the King,
should have the final say and that the moral guidance for all legal decision
should come from the Bible which they considered to be the highest authority in
all matters.
The climax of the revolution was the execution of
Charles I―a watershed in European history that shook the foundations of
European nobility. For the first time in the history of
Throughout all these events the Bible played an
absolutely central role. The Puritans were obsessed with the book. They came to
identify their political struggle against Charles with that of the ancient
Hebrews against Pharaoh or the King of Babylon. Because they identified so
strongly with ancient
One has merely to read the writings of the great
Puritan poet, John Milton (1608-1674) to appreciate the all-pervasive influence
of the Hebrew Bible on the Puritan worldview:
There is no song comparable to the song of
An interesting side benefit of the Puritan
obsession with the Bible was the rapid rise in the rate of literacy. Throughout
human history literacy was a luxury out of most peoples reach and often
deliberately withheld by the ruling class. But since the Puritans believed that
people should use the Bible to connect directly to God, then that meant that
those people had to be literate. So the need to have direct access to the Bible
led to a significant rise in the literacy rates in
Although Puritan domination of
SOURCES:
1. Sivan, Gabriel, "The Bible and
Civilization",
2. Dillenberger John and Welch, Claude, "Protestant
Christianity: Interpreted Through Its Development",
3. Sivan, p. 70