Before the Reformation: Wycliffe and Hus
3rd November 2025 • The PursueGOD Truth Podcast • PursueGOD
00:00:00 00:30:51

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In this episode, we explore the courageous men who paved the way for Martin Luther—followers of Jesus who, long before the Reformation, risked everything to return the church to the authority of Scripture.

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Big Idea:

Long before Martin Luther nailed his 95 Theses, God was already stirring reform in the hearts of ordinary believers. From Peter Waldo to John Wycliffe, Jan Hus, and William Tyndale, the spark of reformation began not in cathedrals but in the conviction that the Bible—not the pope—was the true authority of the church.

Episode Overview

Formation → Conformation → Deformation → Reformation

  • The first-century church was formed as a grassroots gospel movement led by the apostles (Acts 2).
  • The following centuries saw conformation through creeds and councils that clarified core doctrine.
  • After the fall of Rome, the church experienced deformation—institutional corruption, superstition, indulgences, and a Bible out of reach for the common person.
  • Yet even in the “Dark Ages,” God raised reformers who called His people back to the Word.

Key Reformers

Peter Waldo (1170 AD)

  • A wealthy merchant who gave up his riches after reading Matthew 19:21.
  • Funded the first vernacular translation of Scripture into French.
  • His followers—the Waldensians—preached repentance, memorized Scripture, and survived centuries of persecution.

John Wycliffe (1320s–1384)

  • Oxford scholar who rediscovered the gospel of grace through Scripture.
  • Declared that “Scripture alone, not popes or councils, is the final authority.”
  • Produced the first complete English Bible (translated from the Latin Vulgate).
  • His followers, the Lollards, secretly spread handwritten English Bibles and published the Twelve Conclusions (1395)—early “theses” against corruption, indulgences, and unbiblical traditions.

Jan Hus (1369–1415)

  • Czech priest inspired by Wycliffe’s writings.
  • Preached the gospel in Czech so people could understand the Bible.
  • Wrote On the Church, teaching that Christ alone—not the pope—is head of the church.
  • Burned at the stake for refusing to recant, proclaiming, “You may roast this goose, but in a hundred years a swan will arise whose song you will not silence.”
  • A century later, Martin Luther would see himself as that “swan.”
  • His followers, the Hussites, became the Moravians, who later influenced John Wesley and the Methodist Revival.

William Tyndale (1494–1536)

  • Scholar fluent in seven languages, determined to make Scripture accessible to every English speaker.
  • Translated the Bible directly from Greek and Hebrew—the first of its kind in English.
  • Famous vow: “If God spare my life, I will cause a boy that driveth the plow to know more of the Scripture than thou dost.”
  • Printed Bibles were smuggled into England and widely read despite persecution.
  • Martyred for his work; his dying prayer: “Lord, open the King of England’s eyes.”
  • Within three years, King Henry VIII authorized the Great Bible, largely based on Tyndale’s translation.

Takeaway

The Reformation didn’t start with Luther’s hammer—it began in hidden rooms, candlelit homes, and underground movements of faithful men and women who believed every believer should have access to God’s Word.

The true reform of the church has always been about returning to the Bible, rediscovering grace, and declaring Christ alone as head of His church.

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