Gospel Gumbo

Cyril & Methodius: The Gospel in Your Language


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They were accused of heresy—not for denying Christ, but for translating the Bible.

In this episode of Gospel Gumbo, we explore the lives of Cyril and Methodius, two ninth-century Christian brothers whose faithfulness reshaped the church by insisting that the gospel could—and must—be heard in the language of the people.

Cyril and Methodius lived in a world where Christianity was spreading rapidly across Europe, but often as an extension of empire, culture, and political control. Latin dominated worship in the West, Greek in the East, even though most ordinary Christians understood neither. To become Christian often meant adopting the language and customs of the powerful.

Against this assumption, Cyril and Methodius made a revolutionary choice: they translated Scripture and worship into the Slavic language. In doing so, they were accused of doctrinal error, imprisoned, opposed by church leaders, and forced to defend their work before Rome itself.

In this episode, we explore:

  1. Why language mattered so deeply in early Christian missions
  2. How Greek and Latin functioned as sacred languages long after they ceased to be spoken
  3. The creation of the first Slavic alphabet and its lasting legacy
  4. Why translation was seen as dangerous—and why it was faithful
  5. What Pentecost and the incarnation have to do with Bible translation
  6. How the gospel spreads most deeply when it is understood, not imposed

Cyril died young, never seeing his work fully accepted. Methodius endured imprisonment and opposition, yet carried the mission forward until translation was finally approved. Together, their story reminds us that Christianity does not belong to any empire, culture, or sacred language.

The gospel survives translation. In fact, it thrives in it.

For Christians today—especially those living in times of cultural change—Cyril and Methodius offer a powerful reminder: Christ does not require a sacred tongue in order to be truly known. The Word made flesh can also become the Word understood.

Thanks for listening.

Contact me here: [email protected] for corrections, suggestions, encouragements, questions.

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Gospel GumboBy William Sofield