Events

Amersham Museum in Bucks, is doing a Tudor walking tour of Amersham which will include learning about the Lollards, who were the pre-Reformation evangelicals who used to read William Tyndale's New Testament.
Learn how some of the Lollards were martyred for their Christian faith locally. The tour will be conducted by actors in Tudor costume. The walks will last from 2:30 to 4:45 p.m. and start at Amersham Museum.
For tickets, click on the link below.

To mark the 500th anniversary of William Tyndale's New Testament, Chesham Museum is holding some events.
On Sunday 19th April, there will be a guided walking tour in the footsteps of Thomas Harding, Chesham's Lollard Martyr who was burned at the stake after being caught with a copy of William Tyndale's New Testament.
Meet at Moor Road Car Park in Chesham, Bucks, by the Gym and Swim at 2:15 p.m. for a two hour walk.
Tickets cost £6. Please book through the museum via the link below.
Beaconsfield United Reformed Church is holding two special breakfast meetings in co-operation with the Tyndale Society on Saturday mornings in April, to mark the 500th anniversary of the first modern translation of the New Testament into English. A full cooked breakfast will be served at 8:30 a.m. and will be followed by a talk from 9 a.m.
All are welcome. To book a place, please contact
The two Saturday breakfast meetings are on:
Saturday 11th April
A talk by Brian Edwards (author of William Tyndale and the English Bible)
Saturday 18th April
A talk by Neil Rees (Tyndale Society)
Beaconsfield URC is located at Aylesbury End, Beaconsfield, Bucks, HP9 1LW.
See their website for further details, including the church diary.

Candler’s Pitts Theology Library in Atlanta, Georgia, USA is set to host its annual Morgan Forum on Thursday, April 2, 2026. Each year, The Morgan Forum seeks to engage the public in better understanding the long and complex process that resulted in the Bible's English translation.
This year's keynote speaker is Tyndale Society member, Mark Rankin, Professor of English at James Madison University, who will present on the broad and lasting impacts of William Tyndale's first English translation of the New Testament, as seen five hundred years later.
The forum will take place on campus and via livestream from 3:15-4:15 p.m. Eastern Standard Time (EST). Advance registration is required for both options. For further details and to register for the event, please click on the relevant link below.
