Tom Barton and his Uncle Jack live on the edge of danger, smuggling goods under the very nose of the king's searchers. Shrewd, brave, desperate at times, they make run after run across the Channel, braving rough seas, heavy winds, and a growing restlessness among their countrymen. All Europe is aflame ...
with the writing and preaching of Martin Luther. Tom and his uncle come into contact with another man, William Tyndale, whose work and prayer is to put an English Bible into the hands of the common people.
While Uncle Jack sees only the profit in a religious Reformation, it is Tom who sees in Tyndale's work the dawning of a new age and a new way of life for himself and England. William Tyndale was the hawk that dare not hunt by day.
Hunted, hated by many, a fugitive in several countries, this humble man's pen changed the course of history.
For modern Christians, he is the symbol of scholarship and courage, determination and meekness.
For Tom Barton, he was father and friend, teacher and comforter, and the first true testimony of Christ in a godless age.