John Wycliffe was one of the most influential people at the time and was born in a large Saxon family in these regions now known as Wycliffe on Tees. He was born in Ipreswell, Yorkshire, England in about 1324, and died on 31 December 1384 in Lutterworth, Leicestershire, England. When he was a child his education was near his home and finally went to Oxford University and became an academic philosopher, theologian, missionary, translator, reformer and professor of the University of Oxford.
During the reform, the church continued their medieval teachings in the Millennium with one exception. Reformers like John Wycliffe and later Martin Luther started using the Pope to identify Antichrist. Although the reformist's view mainly comes after the millennium, the church could not break the world by seeing the corruption of the Pope. The reformists believed that the millennium began with the Godfather and ended with a pure pope 's victory. The English church was separated from the Catholic church in the era of Henry VIII of 1534. The English church considered the Catholic church an anti-Christ. The millennium is considered to be a church age, and a pure church will have a golden age of Christianity. This is consistent with the teaching of the postmillial generation. The teachings of the previous millennium continued to develop and developed mainly in a group different from the England church.
In the 14th century, John Wycliffe, a scholar of theology at Oxford University and a theologian and a professor at the seminary, returned part of the church to the authority of the gospel through his solid doctrine and a book on the Bible. At the end of his life, he completed the translation of the Bible into English of Latin Vulgate called Wycliffe's Bible. He had a huge impact on what is called "morning star of religious reform." Then in the 15th century, Jan Hus appeared at the University of Prague, a highly capable theologian and a faithful pastor. He acquired John Wycliff's teachings and writings and then swallowed. He served as a powerful Bible teacher and leader in Prague. He was known as the reformer and servant of God, opened the way to Martin Luther of the next century.