The Tyndale Society is talking to partners like the Bible Society and others, to mark the 500th anniversary of William Tyndale's New Testament. His New Testament started to be smuggled into England in 1526 and the 500th anniversary will be in 2026. If you are interested in this, please contact our Projects Coordinator.
The Tyndale Society has developed a YouTube channel for recorded talks. It includes a talk given by Tyndale Society founder, David Daniell, given at Tyndale House in Cambridge in 2004. Most of the content is made up of talks from our online Tyndale Talks, which began in September 2024. The number of talks will grow as content is edited and uploaded.
This project is being produced by Marilyn Button (Chair of the Tyndale Society USA) and Helena Filmalter (Projects Coordinator of the Tyndale Society USA). For more information, please contact Helena directly.
For a taste of the new channel, please click on the button below.
To mark the 500th anniversary of the New Testament, Tyndale Society member Anne Hayward has developed a walking trail in South Gloucestershire in the stomping ground of William Tyndale. This walking route for pilgrims and historians uses existing footpaths, much of it along the Cotswold Way, and connects places of interest, including ancient churches which Tyndale would have known. The 'Tyndale Trail' is about twenty-eight miles long. Depending which way you walk it, it starts (or ends) at the sculpture of William Tyndale in Millennium Square (central Bristol) and ends (or starts) at the Tyndale Monument at North Nibley.
For more details please go to the
If you are interested in this, please contact our Projects Coordinator.
The Tyndale Society is working with the American, evangelical publisher Crossway to make a half-hour documentary about William Tyndale. This will be filmed on location in England and Antwerp, featuring interviews with experts from the Tyndale Society.
Since 2021, the Tyndale Society has been partnering with MissionAssist to digitise William Tyndale's publlshed Scripture translations. We are digitising Tyndale's published Bible translation work firstly in the original spelling so that you can see how it looked, and then in modernised spelling, to make it easier for people to read.
These works will be available for scholars and historians. The intention is to develop an app that can be made available for research. We hope to have this ready for the celebration of the 500th anniversary of the New Testament in 2026. The work is being made accessible on the Tyndale Global Bible website.
If you are interested in this, please contact our Projects Coordinator.