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Seeking Truth in a World of Counterfeits
We’re continuing in our series Seeking Truth in a World of Counterfeits.
We’ve asked the question of what is truth, and we determined that truth had to exist outside of us.
If we were going to have truth, if we were going to have a right or wrong, if we were going to have morals, the source had to be outside of humanity.
But what was this moral giver?
So we then asked,
Does God Exist?
And we discussed the vastness of our universe, the immeasurable complexity of our own bodies and we wondered how did this all start.
We took a step back and realized that somewhere, at sometime, someone or something had to set all of this into motion.
There had to be an instigator and we wondered, if this instigator, “God” exists, can God be known?
Our conclusion was yes, that God has revealed Himself in the Creation.
And so now we’re going to look at two ways that God has made Himself known, beginning this week with what is often referred to as God’s Word, the Bible.
What is the Bible?
It is popular today to bash the Bible and its legitimacy.
It’s just a bunch of men’s opinions.It’s a collection of writings.
Let’s look at what the Bible is and how it is unique from any other book we have.
Written over about a 1500 year period
Written by more than forty authors from every walk of life, including kings, military leaders, peasants, philosophers, fishermen, tax collectors, poets, musicians, statesmen, scholars, and shepherds
Written in different places:
By Moses in wilderness
By Jeremiah in a dungeon
By Daniel on a hillside & in a palace
By Paul inside prison walls
By Luke while traveling
By John in exile
Written on three continents
Asia
Africa
Europe
Written in three languages
Hebrew
Aramaic
Greek
Written in a wide variety of literary styles including:
poetry
history
song
romance
didactic treatise
personal correspondence
biography/autobiography
and more...
The Bible addresses hundreds of controversial subjects.
Yet from Genesis through Revelation, these writers addressed them with an amazing degree of harmony.
In spite of its diversity, the Bible presents a single unfolding story: God’s redemption of human beings
I would challenge anyone to find any collection with such diversity and yet maintain such cohesion.
Geisler and Nix put it this way: “The ‘Paradise Lost’ of Genesis becomes the ‘Paradise Regained’ of Revelation.
Whereas the gate to the tree of life is closed in Genesis, it is opened forevermore in Revelation”
McDowell, J. (2006).
Evidence for christianity (p.
23).
Thomas Nelson Publishers.
Finally, and most important, among all the people described in the Bible, the leading character throughout is the one, true, living God made known through Jesus Christ
Is the Bible God’s Word?
Well, the Bible claims to be:
Hold on, so the Bible claims to be God’s Word to us, how do we know that it is true?
After all, we are seeking truth in a world of counterfeits.
The Bible sets for itself an incredibly high standard.
Deuteronomy 18:22 (ESV)
when a prophet speaks in the name of the Lord, if the word does not come to pass or come true, that is a word that the Lord has not spoken;
Think about that.
If one is to make a prophecy in the name of the Lord it must come to pass for the person to truly be considered a prophet.
There is not room given for exceptions.
So, how does the Bible live up to this incredibly high standard?
Norman Geisler and William Nix in their book, A General Introduction to the Bible, put it this way:
No unconditional prophecy of the Bible about events to the present day has gone unfulfilled.
Hundreds of predictions, some of them given hundreds of years in advance, have been literally fulfilled.
Not one, not a dozen, but hundreds of prophecies made and fulfilled exactly as they had been foretold.
And this is not the rewriting of history, we can show the prophecies when they were written and see when those prophecies come true.
And we can’t even predict the weather!
Fulfilled prophecy is a strong indication of the unique, divine authority of the Bible.
There is definitely a level of credibility from the sheer number of prophecies fulfilled that you don’t get from any other book.
In his now classic Anatomy of Criticism, world-renowned literary critic Northrop Frye observed that “Western literature has been more influenced by the Bible than any other book” (Frye, AC, 14).
“Western literature has been more influenced by the Bible than any other book”
Twenty-five years later, Frye wrote: “I soon realized that a student of English literature who does not know the Bible does not understand a good deal of what is going on in what he reads: The most conscientious student will be continually misconstruing the implications, even the meaning” (Frye, GC, xii).
I had a professor in college who basically said the same thing.
So why would we consider the Bible God’s Word?
Again, it claims to be:
It constantly points us back to God-
Joshua was commanded to not let the Law depart from him:
A mentor of mine when asked, “How can you know the Bible is true?”, responded with, “I used to have a long answer for this with all kinds of evidence, now I just say, “Read the Bible and do what it says, and you’ll see.”
Now that means read it as it is written, not just picking up a passage here and there.
In his classic book, What’s Wrong with the World?”, G.K. Chesterton wrote: “The Christian ideal has not been tried and found wanting.
It has been found difficult; and left untried.”
Too many self professed “Bible believing” Christians struggling with issues today don’t seem to view the Bible as a reliable source for answers to those issues.
In a recent survey only about half responded that they would consult the Bible when dealing with a difficult issue.
How about you?
With all the evidence of the Bible ‘s credibility and authority, with all the support of it being God’s Word to us, how often do you read God’s Word?
Do you put it into practice?
Our God still speaks.
God speaks through His Word that we have in the Bible.
God speaks and reveals himself through his creation.
How are we responding?
We asked the question
Can God Be Known?
The answer is a definitive YES!
In God’s Word we read of God’s witness, of his plan to redeem the world.
Geisler and Nix put it this way:
“The ‘Paradise Lost’ of Genesis becomes the ‘Paradise Regained’ of Revelation.
Whereas the gate to the tree of life is closed in Genesis, it is opened forevermore in Revelation”
The fact is that the unifying thread from sin and condemnation to a redemption to a life of complete transformation and eternity with our Creator.
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