Is the Bible really God’s Word?
Many Christian (people) frequently
want to know about the Bible. But even more important than knowing is
understanding what the Bible says about itself. So, more than any one person's
opinion, it’s vital that we examine what the Scriptures say about it’s own
inspiration.
UNDERSTANDING INSPIRATION
A key verse about inspiration is
found in 2 Timothy 3:16: “All Scripture is inspired by God and profitable
for teaching, for reproof, for correction, for training in righteousness.” The
phrase: “All Scripture is inspired by God” highlights three important principles.
The Bible, Not the Authors
First, the
Scriptures themselves are inspired, not the authors of the Bible. Although the
authors of the Scriptures were said to be moved by God’s Spirit (2 Peter 1:21),
Paul writes to Timothy that it is the Bible itself that is inspired, which
means literally, God-breathed. This single word indicates that the Bible
comes from God, that God exhaled the Scriptures into being. When you
read the word inspired, you may think it means breathing into something. Rather, this verse is saying
that God breathed out the Scriptures. The very words we read in the biblical
text are “breathed out” by God. They don’t become inspired when we read them
and find something of value for our lives. The text of Scripture stands as
God’s Word even if we don't read it (but of course we should).
The Whole Bible
Second, the
entire Bible is inspired. The Scriptures are God’s Word in their entirety. Some
people say that when Paul wrote 2 Timothy 3:16, he was only referring to the
Old Testament and not the New Testament. But in his previous letter to Timothy,
Paul said, “For the Scripture says, “You shall not muzzle the ox while he is
threshing; and “The laborer is worthy of his wages” (1 Tim. 5:18). Paul is
quoting two verses of Scripture here, one from Deuteronomy 25:4 in the Old
Testament and the other from Luke 10:7 in the New Testament.
Notice that he calls them both
“Scripture.” It’s likely that the Gospel of Luke was only written about five
years earlier than Paul's quotation of it as Scripture. At about the same time,
Peter, the acknowledged leader of the apostles, wrote in 2 Peter 3:16 that Paul
wrote about salvation “in all his letters, in which there are some matters that
are hard to understand.
The untaught and unstable twist
them to their own destruction, as they also do with the rest of the Scriptures”
(HCSB). This shows Peter considered Paul’s letters to be Scripture. Here’s the
point: By the time Paul wrote 2 Timothy 3:16 and said, “All Scripture is
inspired,” he meant that the whole Bible was inspired, including both
Testaments. Divine Human Authorship Third, God’s Holy Spirit moved human beings
to produce the Bible. The Bible verse describing how God used human authors to
write the books of the Bible is 2 Peter 1:21: “For no prophecy was ever made by
an act of human will, but men moved by the Holy Spirit spoke from God.” The
Holy Spirit empowered people to write Scripture by “moving” or “bearing along”
human authors to speak, and by inference, to write their words down. The word
translated moved (phero in the Greek) is used in Acts 27:15 about a ship being
driven by the wind. In the same way the wind bears a sailboat along, so the
Holy Spirit -moved the human authors to write the Bible. This explains the varying
writing styles and perspectives of biblical authors. Just as the same wind can
bear differing ships with different kinds of sails along in different ways, so
the Holy Spirit can move writers with unique personalities and different styles
to write down God’s words.
UNDERSTANDING INERRANCY
Since the whole Bible is inspired,
it is completely true or inerrant. In the Torah (also known as the
Pentateuch, or the first five books of the Bible), Moses wrote, “God is not a
man who lies, or a son of man who changes His mind. Does He speak and not act,
or promise and not fulfill?” (Num 23:19 HCSB). Paul made a similar statement in
Romans 3:4: “God must be true, even if everyone is a liar” (HCSB). Furthermore,
the Lord Jesus, God incarnate, said of Himself, “I am the way, and the truth,
and the life” (John 14:6). Jesus calls Himself the truth, and He is the divine
author of Scripture. Since God is true and He breathed out the Scriptures, the
Lord Jesus said in His High Priestly prayer for His followers, “Your Word is
truth” (John 17:17). This line of reasoning is where we get the teach-ing that
the Scriptures are inerrant. The point is that the Bible is as true as God
Himself and completely trustworthy.
Original Autographs
To help you better understand the
concept of inerrancy, here are some specific points to remember. First, the
iner-rancy of Scripture is limited to the original autographs. This means that
the original scroll of Isaiah or the actual letter Paul wrote to the Romans are
inerrant. It doesn’t mean that every copy we have today will be a perfect
replica of the original. The good news is that textual criticism, the
study of comparing the surviving ancient manuscripts with one another, is
highly accurate. That's why we can be confident that what we have today
reflects more than 99 percent of the original documents. And for those parts
that remain in question, none of them affect biblical doctrine or prescribed
behavior.
That’s why we can hold our Bible
with the unwavering certainty that it is inerrant. We know it is based on texts
copied years after the original manuscripts and then translated into English,
and we can still claim it is completely true.
What the Bible Affirms
Second, inerrancy only refers to
what the Bible affirms. Some statements in the Scriptures are accurately
recorded but not actually what the Bible teaches. For example, when the serpent
tempted Eve, he misquoted God, claiming that God prohibited eating from any
tree (Gen. 3:1). The Bible records what the serpent truly said but his words
remain untrue.
Ordinary Language
Third, inerrancy assumes that the
Bible uses ordinary, normal language. The Bible mentions the four corners of
the earth (Isa. 11:12) and the sunrise (Ps. 113:3). This doesn't mean that the
Bible teaches the earth is a square or that God's Word denies a heliocentric
view of the universe. The Scriptures are not using scientific precision any
more than a meteorologist on local news is when he tells what the times are for
sunrise and sundown.
FINAL THOUGHTS
Small kids, they enjoyed playing a
game called Jenga. They build a tower, adding wooden piece upon piece, until it
fell down. Someone a little mischievous one, sometimes would deliberately pull
out the bottom piece in order to make the whole tower collapse. This example
reminds us of the inspiration of Scripture. It is foundational to every other
teaching. If we pull that one teaching out, then all the others will fall
apart. It’s why our affirmation of the inspiration and truth of God’s Word is
so vital. If we take it away, it puts our entire faith in jeopardy.

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