As to the original question, I can’t really say.
However, I do believe that being able to read the Bible is very important to Christianity.
So did St. Ulfilas, who invented the Gothic alphabet, taught it to the previously non-literate Visigoths, and then translated the Bible into written Gothic so that they could read it. The Gothic Bible is considered the earliest written literature in any Teutonic language, and dates from the fourth century.
But if it was not really necessary for the Visigoths to be able to read the Bible in the first place, why would St. Ulfilas have gone to all the trouble?
Also, someone brought up another point in this thread about divisions in the church, and how without the Bible there wouldn’t be any Protestants.
In response, I would like to point out that a church that relied solely on institutional memory, with no written records at all, could become just as fractured as it is now, if not even more.
If this sounds improbable, just imagine 2000 years of “Oh yeah? Well, that’s not what we remember being told about it!” or, “Well, that wasn’t what they taught us about doctrine X!”
Long enough of this and you are virtually guaranteed at least one really major quarrel, perhaps culminating with both parties storming off to denounce each other as heretics…
Zirconia