Our Prayer

Our Prayer

Heavenly Father, I know that I have sinned against You and that my sins separate me from You. I am truly sorry. I now want to turn away from my sinful past and turn to You for forgiveness. Please forgive me, and help me avoid sinning again. I believe that Your Son, Jesus Christ, died for my sins, that He was raised from the dead, is alive, and hears my prayer. I invite Jesus to become my Savior and the Lord of my life, to rule and reign in my heart from this day forward. Please send Your Holy Spirit to help me obey You and to convict me when I sin. I pledge to grow in grace and knowledge of You. My greatest purpose in life is to follow Your example and do Your will for the rest of my life. In Jesus' name I pray, Amen.

Wednesday, April 10, 2024

New Series Begins April 14, 2024

A 6-Week Series Begins... 



For the first time in three months, Revelation is in your rear view mirror! For some this is great news! Revelation was a lot of hard work to understand and apply to our lives.

  

This week we are beginning a new series entitled 

“Skeptical.”

This series will not be located in one place in scripture. Instead, over the next six weeks we are going to bounce around the Bible in order to answer some of the biggest questions facing our culture and faith. 

Questions like: 

  1. How can we know the Bible is True and Reliable?
  2. Is Jesus the Only Way to Heaven?
  3. How can a Good God allow Suffering and Evil?
  4. How did We get Here?
  5. Who am I?
  6. Is there Life after Death?

Now more than ever before, we live in a world skeptical of absolute truth and the claims of Christianity.


What is “absolute truth?”


Why do you think our culture is so skeptical about absolute truth?


Whether you’re skeptical or you just happen to live in a skeptical world, this series is for you. To the skeptic, Jesus Christ has an answer for your every doubt. The Skeptical series is designed to show you how Jesus answers questions that might keep you from believing. To the Christian who lives in a skeptical world, Skeptical is meant to equip you to take the truth and certainty of Jesus to a world that doubts truth and certainty. 

We have questions. Jesus has answers.




First Skeptical Question of the Series:






In the roughly 2,000 years since the final book of the Bible was written, and approximately 1,600 years since the canonization (or official compilation) of the Bible, no book in human history has suffered more scrutiny. Rightfully so. The Bible is talking about some pretty big stuff! Eternity, judgment, salvation, righteousness, life, and death – these are important things. They are so important; we should take time to consider whether what the Bible has to say about them is true or not.

People throughout history have tried their best to either conform the Bible or delegitimize the Bible. After all this time, there are some things we know for sure. 

The Bible is one of the most historical reliable documents in existence. Christian Scholars have more confidence in the reliability and validity of the transmission of the Bible’s message throughout human history than almost any other historical document in existence. There are more manuscripts, and in some cases older manuscripts, of the books of the Bible than any of the works of the Roman Emperor Julius Caesar, or the Historian Herodotus, or even the great author Homer.

All that to say, we know the book we hold in our hands is the same book given to Christians before us, all the way back to the ones who wrote down the very words of God for the first time.

Moreover, the events of the Bible in many cases are supported by historical evidence. For example, archeologists have located ancient cities such as Ur the home of Abraham. Ancient Babylonian text talks about the great confusion of world languages like what occurred at the Tower of Babel. Historians mention a Jewish teacher named Jesus who was crucified by the Romans. Ancient letters have been found describing the function of the early church that sounds an awful lot like Acts 2! Most importantly, no one has ever found the body of the Lord Jesus Christ!

What does all this mean? The message of the Bible in your hands is the message originally delivered to humanity, and the message can be trusted. Though it may be difficult, ultimately, we trust the Bible not because history tells us to, but because God tells us to. The same God who created the earth, the same God who raised Christ Jesus from the dead, gave us a Bible. It is true and trustworthy – we must decide if we will believe it or not.

 

Bottom Line: The Bible is reliable and relevant for every person.






2 Timothy 3:10-17

10 “You, however, have followed my teaching, my conduct, my aim in life, my faith, my patience, my love, my steadfastness, 11 my persecutions and sufferings that happened to me at Antioch, at Iconium, and at Lystra — which persecutions I endured; yet from them all the Lord rescued me. 12 Indeed, all who desire to live a godly life in Christ Jesus will be persecuted, 13 while evil people and impostors will go on from bad to worse, deceiving and being deceived. 14 But as for you, continue in what you have learned and have firmly believed, knowing from whom you learned it 15 and how from childhood you have been acquainted with the sacred writings, which are able to make you wise for salvation through faith in Christ Jesus. 16 All Scripture is breathed out by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness, 17 that the man of God may be complete, equipped for every good work.”

The Holy Bible: English Standard Version (Wheaton, IL: Crossway Bibles, 2016), 2 Timothy 3:10-17.





Study Notes:

This week we are not only studying the Bible, but the subject of our study is the Bible. What does the Bible say about the Bible? What do Christians believe about the Bible? 2 Timothy 3:14-17 gives us one of the clearest expressions of Christian belief concerning the Bible in all of scripture. In 2 Timothy 3 Paul defines how Christians should relate to the Bible, what Christians should believe about the Bible, and what benefit the Bible has for Christians.

 

Christians Should Have an Ongoing 

Relationship with the Bible!

 



Notice that Paul’s first extortion to Timothy is that he “continue” in what he had previously learned about the Bible. Paul is asking Timothy to engage in an ongoing, continuing relationship with the Word of God. This is a reminder that Christians don’t simply interact with the Bible for the sake of gaining one-time information. Instead, we continually seek to understand the Bible for the sake of the life transformation that happens when we interact with God by reading it. So, the Christian cannot hold a “one and done” mindset when it comes to reading the Bible and learning what it has to say. Instead, we have a mindset of “again and again,” we will go to the Word of God to hear from God.

 

The Bible is the Only Word of God.

 

Paul calls the Bible sacred. Sacred means that something is different, unlike anything else. The Bible is unlike anything else because it’s the only book on Earth that is the word of God, delivered to humans. That the Bible is sacred means that we approach it very differently than any other book. We come before the Bible with reverence and intentionality as we understand that when the Bible speaks, God speaks.

 

The Bible points us to Jesus and makes 

us more like Jesus.

 

This passage gives us clarity as to the purpose and benefit of the Bible in the life of Christians. First, the Bible points us to the path of salvation by faith in Jesus. We approach the Bible wrongly when we come to it as if it were an instruction manual about life. It’s actually much more than that. The Bible is the revelation of God about the Savior Jesus Christ, and the Bible tells us how we can find salvation in God. Second, the Bible shapes us by correcting wrong actions and encouraging new actions that make us more like Jesus. Understood rightly, the Bible shows us the path of salvation and the way we can progress in the Christian life.




Questions for Discussion

 

Are you continuing to learn the Bible? How are you pursuing that study?

If the Bible is a book about Jesus, in what ways does the Old Testament point us to Jesus?

Why is it important to understand that the Bible is a book about Jesus, not a book about us?

How can we let the Bible correct, reprove, and train us?

What other books have helped you grow in your Christian walk?

 

END

Teacher Notes:





Click Play to Watch

The song portrays truth as a person — Jesus Christ. This is important because you could say that when we deny truth, we are denying Jesus.


“What is truth?”

In John 18:37-38, Jesus is before Pilate and Pilate asks him the question for the ages, “What is truth?”

…I came into the world, to testify to the truth. Everyone on the side of truth listens to Me.

The amazing thing about this question from Pilate is that standing before him was the embodiment of truth and yet it seems Pilate missed it. Like Pilate, every person is in search of the truth, most asking the same question what is truth? The challenge we face is not people asking the question, but do they really want the answer.

 

What Is truth?

Dictionary defines truth: “the true or actual state of a matter; conformity with fact or reality; a verified or indisputable fact, proposition, principle, or the like.”

This definition shows there is a definitive nature to truth. The words are very decisive. Truth is factual and indisputable.

Today, the average person would probably narrow down truth into two categories, absolute and relative truth.

 

What Is the Difference Between Absolute and Relative Truth?

1. Absolute Truth. Absolute truth is true regardless of how a person thinks or feels about it. Here is a biblical example of absolute truth. Jesus is Lord. Regardless of how you feel about that statement, it is true. Many will argue about this statement and try to debate its veracity, but this does not change the truth that Jesus is Lord.

Here is a verse that defines what absolute truth looks like.

“Therefore, God exalted him to the highest place and gave him the name that is above every name, that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, in heaven and on earth and under the earth, and every tongue acknowledge that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father” (Philippians 2:9-11).

In this verse, every knee will bow, and every tongue will confess that Jesus Christ is Lord. On this day opinions or feelings won’t matter because everyone will acknowledge Jesus as Lord. Whether you agree or not, what makes this truth absolute is it doesn’t change based on your opinion.

 

2. Relative Truth. Relative truth is the belief that truth changes based on the individual’s understanding of it. There are no absolutes - what may be true for you is simply not true for me.

 

A common statement reflecting relative truth may sound like this “You have your truth and I have mine.” The problem with relative truth is it is a contradiction in terms. If the truth is factual and indisputable then you cannot have different truths for different people. Relative truth is a rejection of absolute truth.

One reason people embrace the idea of relative truth is because it allows them to create their own reality that frees them to do whatever they want.

 

Truth and Jesus

John 14:6 Jesus said to him, “I am the way, and the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me.

John 1:14 And the Word became flesh and dwelt among us, and we have seen his glory, glory as of the only Son from the Father, full of grace and truth.

John 16:13 When the Spirit of truth comes, he will guide you into all the truth, for he will not speak on his own authority, but whatever he hears he will speak, and he will declare to you the things that are to come.

2 Timothy 2:15 Do your best to present yourself to God as one approved, a worker who has no need to be ashamed, rightly handling the word of truth.

John 1:1 In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.

Ephesians 6:14 Stand therefore, having fastened on the belt of truth, and having put on the breastplate of righteousness,

1 John 5:20 And we know that the Son of God has come and has given us understanding, so that we may know him who is true; and we are in him who is true, in his Son Jesus Christ. He is the true God and eternal life.

 

How Can We Know the Bible Is True and Reliable?

 

How do you answer this for yourself?

 

Well, if you believe that absolute truth is a person namely Jesus Christ and the Bible is the revelation of Jesus Christ then there is one reason we know.


Notes: 

In the roughly 2,000 years since the final book of the Bible was written, and approximately 1,600 years since the canonization (or official compilation) of the Bible, no book in human history has suffered more scrutiny. Rightfully so. The Bible is talking about some pretty big stuff! Eternity, judgment, salvation, righteousness, life, and death – these are important things. They are so important; we should take time to consider whether what the Bible has to say about them is true or not.

People throughout history have tried their best to either conform the Bible or delegitimize the Bible. After all this time, there are some things we know for sure.

The Bible is one of the most historical reliable documents in existence. Christian Scholars have more confidence in the reliability and validity of the transmission of the Bible’s message throughout human history than almost any other historical document in existence. There are more manuscripts, and in some cases older manuscripts, of the books of the Bible than any of the works of the Roman Emperor Julius Caesar, or the Historian Herodotus, or even the great author Homer.

All that to say, we know the book we hold in our hands is the same book given to Christians before us, all the way back to the ones who wrote down the very words of God for the first time.

Moreover, the events of the Bible in many cases are supported by historical evidence. For example, archeologists have located ancient cities such as Ur, the home of Abraham. Ancient Babylonian text talks about the great confusion of world languages like what occurred at the Tower of Babel. Historians mention a Jewish teacher named Jesus who was crucified by the Romans. Ancient letters have been found describing the function of the early church that sounds an awful lot like Acts 2! Most importantly, no one has ever found the body of the Lord Jesus Christ!

What does all this mean?

The message of the Bible in your hands is the message originally delivered to humanity, and the message can be trusted. Though it may be difficult, ultimately, we trust the Bible not because history tells us to, but because God tells us to. The same God who created the earth, the same God who raised Christ Jesus from the dead, gave us a Bible. It is true and trustworthy – we must decide if we will believe it or not.

…………

 

 

2 Timothy 3:10-13

“You, however, have followed my teaching, my conduct, my aim in life, my faith, my patience, my love, my steadfastness, my persecutions and sufferings that happened to me at Antioch, at Iconium, and at Lystra — which persecutions I endured; yet from them all the Lord rescued me. Indeed, all who desire to live a godly life in Christ Jesus will be persecuted, while evil people and impostors will go on from bad to worse, deceiving and being deceived.

What does this passage say to Paul’s belief in the truth and reliability of God’s Word?

 

2 Timothy 3:14-15

But as for you, continue in what you have learned and have firmly believed, knowing from whom you learned it and how from childhood you have been acquainted with the sacred writings, which are able to make you wise for salvation through faith in Christ Jesus.

 

What does this passage say to Paul’s belief in the truth and reliability of God’s Word?

 

2 Timothy 3:16-17

All Scripture is breathed out by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness, that the man of God may be complete, equipped for every good work.”



Scripture is completely trustworthy because God was in control of its writing.

 

How can we let the Bible correct, reprove, and train us?

 



 



If you can read any of the thousand languages where the Bible is translated, you can hear the voice of God infallibly.

Whether you will acknowledge that He is speaking is another matter, but He is speaking.

 

For Timothy, the holy Scriptures was the Old Testament – Genesis to Malachi. The Old Testament is important because it points to Jesus Christ. 

 

In what ways does the Old Testament point us to Jesus?

 

1.   Christians Should Have an Ongoing Relationship with the Bible! 

Paul’s first point to Timothy is that he “continues in” what he had previously learned about the Bible. Paul is asking Timothy to engage in an ongoing, continuing relationship with the Word of God.

 

Are you doing this?

How are you pursuing a relationship with God’s Word?

 

Why is it important to understand that the Bible is a book about Jesus, not a book about us?

 

In his charge, Paul told Timothy that people who obey God and live for Christ will be persecuted. Don’t be surprised when people misunderstand, criticize, and even try to hurt you because of what you believe and how you live. Don’t give up. Continue to live as you know you should. God is the only one you need to please.

 

2.   The Bible is the Only Word of God.

Paul calls the Bible sacred. Sacred means that something is different, unlike anything else. The Bible is unlike anything else because it’s the only book on Earth that is the word of God, delivered to humans.

 

If the Bible is sacred, how are we to treat it?

 

3.   The Bible points us to Jesus and makes us more like Jesus.

 



What other books have helped you grow in your Christian walk?

 

 

2 Timothy 4:2-4

Preach the word; be prepared in season and out of season; correct, rebuke and encourage — with great patience and careful instruction. For the time will come when people will not put up with sound doctrine. Instead, to suit their own desires, they will gather around them a great number of teachers to say what their itching ears want to hear. They will turn their ears away from the truth and turn aside to myths.

 

This is the age we are living in.

People are surrounding themselves with those who will tell them the “truth” they want to hear. While this gives them the freedom to justify how they live, they are basing their lives on a truth that is not true at all.

Relative Truth

 

Bottom Line: The Bible is reliable and relevant for every person.

Billy Graham writes that the great Swiss theologian, Dr. Karl Barth, was probably in his generation the greatest theologian and philosopher in the world. He didn’t always agree with him, but he was a friend and he respected him. While he was in this country, a student at one of the seminaries said, “Dr. Barth, what is the greatest truth that ever crossed your mind?” All the seminary students were sitting on the edge of their seats to hear some great, profound, deep, complicated answer. Dr. Barth slowly raised his shaggy gray head and looked at the student and said,

 

“Jesus loves me, this I know, for the Bible tells me so.”

 

END 

 

Bible Commentary:

In Lystra, Timothy’s hometown, Paul had been stoned and left for dead; and this was only one incident among many. In 2 Corinthians 11:23-33 Paul summarized his lifetime of suffering for the sake of the gospel. Paul mentioned his suffering here to contrast his experience with that of the pleasure-seeking false teachers.

In his charge, Paul told Timothy that people who obey God and live for Christ will be persecuted. Don’t be surprised when people misunderstand, criticize, and even try to hurt you because of what you believe and how you live. Don’t give up. Continue to live as you know you should. God is the only one you need to please.

Don’t expect false teachers and evil people to reform and change on their own. Left alone, they will go from bad to worse. If you have the opportunity, correct them to bring them back to faith in Christ. Fight for the truth, especially to protect younger Christians.

Besieged by false teachers and the inevitable pressures of a growing ministry, Timothy could easily have abandoned his faith or modified his doctrine. Once again Paul counseled Timothy to look to his past, and to hold to the basic teachings about Jesus that are eternally true. Like Timothy, we are surrounded by false teachings. But we must not allow our society to distort or crowd out God’s eternal truth. Spend time every day reflecting on the foundation of your Christian faith found in God’s Word, the great truths that build up your life.

Timothy was one of the first second-generation Christians; he became a Christian not because an evangelist preached a powerful sermon, but because his mother and grandmother taught him the holy Scriptures when he was a small child. A parent’s work is vitally important. At home and in church, we should realize that teaching small children is both an opportunity and a responsibility. Jesus wanted little children to come to Him. Like Timothy’s mother and grandmother, Eunice and Lois, do your part in leading children to Christ.

For Timothy, the holy Scriptures was the Old Testament – Genesis to Malichi. The Old Testament is important because it points to Jesus Christ. At the same time, faith in Christ makes the whole Bible intelligible.

The Bible is not a collection of stories, fables, myths, or merely human ideas about God. It is not a human book. Through the Holy Spirit, God revealed His person and plan to certain believers, who wrote down His message for His people. This process is known as inspiration. The writers wrote from their own personal, historical, and cultural contexts. Although they used their own minds, talents, language, and style, they wrote what God wanted them to write. Scripture is completely trustworthy because God was in control of its writing. Its words are entirely authoritative to our faith and lives. The Bible is God-breathed. Read it and use its teachings to guide your conduct.

The whole Bible is God’s inspired Word. Because it is inspired and trustworthy, we should read it and apply it to our lives. The Bible is our standard for testing everything else that claims to be true. Its our safeguard against false teaching and our source of guidance for how we should live. It is our only source of knowledge about how we can be saved. God wants to show you what is true and equip you to live for Him. How much time do you spend in God’s Word? Read it regularly to discover God’s truth and to become confident in your life and faith. Develop a plan for reading the whole Bible, not just the familiar passages.

In our zeal for the truth of Scripture, we must never forget its purpose – to equip us to do good. We should not study God’s Word simply to increase our knowledge or to prepare us to win arguments. We should study the Bible so that we will know how to do Christ work in the world. Our knowledge of God’s Word is not useful unless it strengthens our faith and leads us to do good.

 

Is the Bible true?

Logic requires that there is only one objective “truth” for any specific claim. Contradictory claims cannot be equally true. For example, the statements “the hamster is in its cage” and “the hamster cage is empty” cannot both be true simultaneously. This evaluation of truth applies to spiritual matters as well as logical or physical matters. It’s reasonable to claim that the Bible is true in a way that excludes all other statements. Examining the Bible in the same way we would any other text, we can confidently say that it is, in fact, true.

The Bible not only encourages readers to examine their own beliefs (1 John 4:1), but it also commends those who check spiritual claims for truth (Acts 17:11). The Bible makes claims based on history and eyewitnesses (Luke 1:1–4; 2 Peter 1:16), connects belief to visible evidence (John 20:30–31), and ties biblical ideas to the observable world (Psalm 19:1; Romans 1). Jesus overtly claimed to represent an exclusive truth (John 18:37; 14:6). So, the Bible is clearly meant to be interpreted as true, and exclusively true (John 17:17).

Where we can check biblical claims against verifiable truth, the Bible proves itself accurate. History, archaeology, science, and philosophy have shown Scripture to be factual and consistent. This correspondence between various forms of evidence is a major advantage the Bible has over the scriptures of any other faith system. In many cases, it has been the deciding factor in converting skeptics and nonbelievers to faith in Christ.

Whether or not the Bible is true is a separate question from whether or not a particular passage is “literal.” It’s reasonable to say that a phrase or statement is true, even if the truth is not presented in literal terms. For example, if a person says during a heavy rain, “It’s raining cats and dogs,” the statement is true — it’s just not literal. Idiomatic phrases are meant to be interpreted. The same principle applies to John’s words about Jesus: “Look, the Lamb of God!” (John 1:36). Of course, a person might ask for clarification, and be told, based on Old Testament passages, that Jesus isn’t literally a wooly farm animal, but that He’s the fulfillment of the Law and the divinely chosen sacrifice to redeem the world. The figurative nature of John’s statement doesn’t make his statement untrue, simply metaphorical. It’s good to remember that the Bible is comprised of sixty-six separate books, and each of them often contains different types of literature and a mixture of literal and figurative language.

More so than with any other religious text, we have assurance that the Bible is true. The combination of internal consistency, connection to evidence, and relevance to our experience makes the Bible unique among books. Like many religious works, the Bible claims to be true (2 Timothy 3:16). Unlike any other religious work, the Bible emphatically supports that assertion.

 

 

Is the Bible reliable?

Using the same criteria by which we judge other historical works, not only is the Bible reliable, but it is also more reliable than any other comparable writings. Reliability is a question of truthfulness and accurate copying. Writings that are historically and factually correct and that have been faithfully preserved over time would be considered reliable. Higher levels of historical verification and better confidence in transmission make it easier to determine whether an ancient work is worthy of trust. By those measures, we can consider the Bible reliable.

As is true with any historical work, not every single detail in the Bible can be directly confirmed. The Bible cannot be called unreliable simply because it contains parts which cannot be confirmed or have not yet been confirmed. What’s reasonable is to expect it to be accurate where it can be checked. This is the primary test of reliability, and here the Bible has a stellar track record. Not only have many of its historical details been confirmed, but certain portions that were once in doubt have been verified by later archaeology.

For example, archaeological finds in the 1920s confirmed the presence of cities much like Ur, described in Genesis 11, which some skeptics doubted had existed so early. Engravings discovered in an Egyptian tomb depict the installation of a viceroy in a manner that exactly matches the biblical description of the ceremony involving Joseph (Genesis 41:39–42). Clay tablets dating to 2300 BC have been found in Syria strongly supporting Old Testament stories, vocabulary, and geography. Skeptics doubted the existence of the Hittites (Genesis 15:20; 23:10; 49:29), until a Hittite city, complete with records, was found in Turkey. There are dozens of other Old Testament facts supported by archaeological discovery.

More importantly, no facts presented in the Old or New Testaments have been shown false. This historical reliability is crucial to our trust in other statements made in Scripture.

Even the “miraculous” occurrences of Genesis have evidential basis we can appeal to today. Ancient Babylonian records describe a confusion of language, in accordance with the biblical account of the Tower of Babel (Genesis 11:1–9). These same records describe a worldwide flood, an event present in literally hundreds of forms in cultures all over the world. The sites where Sodom and Gomorrah (Genesis 19) once sat have been found, displaying evidence of fiery and violent destruction. Even the plagues of Egypt and the resulting Exodus (Exodus 12:40–41) have archaeological support.

This trend continues in the New Testament, where the names of various cities, political officials, and events have been repeatedly confirmed by historians and archaeologists. Luke, the writer of that gospel and the book of Acts, has been described as a first-rate historian for his attention to detail and accurate reporting. In both the Old and New Testament writings, the Bible proves reliable wherever it can be checked.

Accurate copying is also an important factor in the Bible’s reliability. New Testament writings were composed within a few decades of the events they describe, far too early for legend or myth to overtake actual history. In fact, the basic framework of the gospel can be dated to a formal creed just a few years after the crucifixion of Jesus, according to Paul’s description in 1 Corinthians 15:3–8. Historians have access to a tremendous number of manuscripts, proving the New Testament was reliably and quickly copied and distributed. This gives ample confidence that what we read today correctly represents the original writing.

The Old Testament, as well, shows all evidence of being reliably transmitted. When the Dead Sea Scrolls were discovered in the 1940s, they were 800 years older than any other available manuscripts. Comparing earlier and later manuscripts showed a meticulous approach to transmission, once again adding to our confidence that what we have today represents the original texts.

Those factors all give objective reasons to consider the Bible reliable. At the same time, it’s critically important to examine those same factors in other texts we use to write our history books. The Bible has more empirical support, a shorter time between original writing and surviving copies, and a greater number of source manuscripts than any other ancient work, by far.

For example, there are 251 copies of the works of Julius Caesar, the earliest from 950 years after he wrote, with no way to know how well those copies represent the originals. There are 109 copies of the works of the historian Herodotus, the earliest from 1,400 years after he wrote. Archaeologists have found 1800+ manuscript copies of the works of Homer, allowing us a 95 percent confidence in the original text.

For the New Testament, there are currently more than 5,000 manuscripts, with most early copies anywhere from 200 to 300 years later, and some less than 100 years later. This gives a better than 99 percent confidence in the contents of the original text.

In short, we not only have objective reasons to claim the Bible is reliable, but we cannot call it unreliable without throwing out almost everything else we know of ancient history. If the Scriptures don’t pass a test for trustworthiness, no records from that era can. The Bible’s reliability is proven in both its historical accuracy and its accurate transmission.

 

Why should I believe the Bible?

The Bible makes claims about the creation of the universe, the nature of the God who created the universe and reigns supremely over it, and the fate of mankind. If these claims are true, then the Bible is the most important book in the history of mankind. If the Bible is true, then it holds the answers to life’s biggest questions: “Where did I come from?” “Why am I here?” and “What happens to me when I die?” The importance of the Bible’s message demands it receive fair consideration, and the truthfulness of its message is observable, testable, and able to withstand scrutiny.

The writers of the Bible claim that the Bible is God’s very Word. The apostle Paul writes that “all Scripture is God-breathed” (2 Timothy 3:16). All the words recorded in the original writing of Scripture originated from the mouth of God before ever reaching the minds and pens of the biblical writers. The apostle Peter also writes that “prophecy never had its origin in the human will, but prophets, though human, spoke from God as they were carried along by the Holy Spirit” (2 Peter 1:21). The phrase “carried along” is indicative of a sail being propelled by the wind. That is, the writing of Scripture was directed by the Holy Spirit. The Bible does not originate with man and is, then, a product of God and carries the authority of God.

At this point, it is important not to let circular reasoning become the justification for believing the Bible. We cannot say that one should believe the Bible simply because the Bible says it should be believed. If, however, the truth claims of the Bible are found true whenever it is possible to test their veracity or are proved true during historical and scientific discovery, then the internal claims of the Bible’s own trustworthiness are more compelling. The internal evidence works in tandem with the external.

The internal evidence of Scripture’s veracity provides many compelling arguments for why one should believe the Bible. First, the unique message of the Bible sets it apart from other religious texts. The Bible, for instance, teaches that mankind is inherently sinful and deserving of eternal death. If man were responsible for the content of the Bible, the view of humanity would not be so dark — we tend to make ourselves look good. The Bible also teaches that humans can do nothing of themselves to remedy their natural state. This, too, goes against human pride.

The unity of the biblical message is further reason for why one should believe the Bible. The Bible was written over a period of approximately 1,550 years, with at least 40 human writers, most of whom did not know each other and were from varying backgrounds (king, fisherman, tax collector, shepherd, etc.). The Bible was written in various environments (desert, prison, royal court, etc.). Three different languages were used to write the Bible, and, despite covering controversial subjects, it carries one harmonious message. The circumstances surrounding the writing of the Bible would seem to guarantee its fallibility, and, yet the message from Genesis to Revelation is uncannily consistent.

Another reason why one should believe the Bible is its accuracy. The Bible should not be confused with a science textbook, but that does not mean that the Bible does not speak to issues that are scientific in nature. The water cycle was described in Scripture centuries before it was a scientific discovery. In some cases, science and the Bible have seemed to be at odds with each other. Yet, when science has advanced, the scientific theories have proved wrong, and the Bible proved right. For example, it used to be standard medical practice to bleed patients as a cure for illness. Many people died because of excessive blood loss. Now medical professionals know that bloodletting as a cure for most diseases is counterproductive. The Bible always taught that “the life of a creature is in the blood” (Leviticus 17:11).

The Bible’s truth claims concerning world history have also been substantiated. Skeptics used to criticize the Bible for its mention of the Hittite people (e.g., 2 Kings 7:6). The lack of any archaeological evidence to support the existence of a Hittite culture was often cited as a rebuttal against Scripture. In 1876, however, archaeologists discovered evidence of the Hittite nation, and by the early 20th century the vastness of the Hittite nation and its influence in the ancient world was common knowledge.

The scientific and historical accuracy of the Bible is important evidence of the Bible’s trustworthiness, but the Bible also contains fulfilled prophecies. Some of the biblical writers made claims about future events centuries in advance. If any one of the events predicted had occurred, it would be astounding. But the Bible contains many, many prophecies. Some of the predictions were fulfilled in a short amount of time (Abraham and Sarah had a son, Peter denied Jesus three times, Paul was a witness for Jesus in Rome, etc.). Other predictions were fulfilled hundreds of years later. The 300 messianic prophecies fulfilled by Jesus could not have reasonably been fulfilled by one person unless some greater power was involved. Specific prophecies like Jesus’ birthplace, activities, manner of death, and resurrection demonstrate the preternatural accuracy of Scripture.

When it is put to the test, the Bible is proved true in every area. Its truth extends to the spiritual, as well. That means that when the Bible says the Hittite nation existed, then we can believe that there were Hittites, and when the Bible teaches that “all have sinned” (Romans 3:23) and the “wages of sin is death” (Romans 6:23), then we need to believe that, too. And, when the Bible tells us that “God demonstrates His own love for us in this: While we were still sinners, Christ died for us” (Romans 5:8) and that “whoever believes in [Jesus] shall not perish but have eternal life” (John 3:16), then we can and should believe that, also.