Archive for the 'Bible Studies for Life' Category
3 Reasons We Can Trust the Bible
Christianity differs from every other religious system in this major way: our savior rose from the dead. This distinctive is the culmination of a number of other truths, including the deity of Christ, the virgin birth of Christ, and His sinless life. These truths taken together portray a Savior for the world who is unique from any who lived before or after Him.
It is important to recognize and admit that virtually everything we know about Jesus comes from the Bible. If we can trust the Bible, then we can be confident of the things it says about Jesus. If we cannot trust the Bible, then, well, we are in a lot of trouble.
Is the Bible as unique as the Savior it describes or is it along the line of the Koran, the Bhagavad Gita, the Book of Mormon, or any of the world’s other religious texts?
A recent session of Bible Studies for Life: Honest to God addressed why we can trust the Bible. The author, Robert Jeffress, selected three of the most common reasons for believing the Bible can be trusted in all matters of history, faith and practice: archaeological evidence, the number of ancient manuscripts of the Bibles books, and the impact it has had on humanity.
1. Archaeological Evidence
For more than a hundred years, archaeologists – even skeptical ones – have found artifacts confirming the truthfulness and accuracy of the inspired text. According to the study session entitled, Why Should I Trust the Bible?, “Archaeological discoveries have confirmed many locations and events in the Bible such as the location of Nineveh, the pool of Siloam…and the rule of Pontius Pilate. Archaeology has not disproved any event, person, or location in Scripture.”1
Far from undermining scripture, archaeology on the whole verifies it.
2. Ancient Manuscripts
Another reason we can trust the Bible is found in the sheer volume of ancient manuscripts that confirm it. There are currently in existence thousands of copies of the Old and New Testament manuscripts (the copies made from the originals). These were hand copied texts, transmitted with great care through the centuries. In contrast, the next highest number of documents supporting an ancient work are those of Homer’s Iliad. There are less than 650 known copies of it. “There is more – and earlier – manuscript support for the Jesus Christ described in the Gospels than for any other figure in the ancient world, including Julius Caesar and Alexander the Great.”2
3. The Bible’s Impact
A final proof of the Bible’s trustworthiness is the enormous and lasting impact it has had in the lives of people. There is a reason the Bible is the best selling book in history – God uses it to change lives. Leaders in all areas of society, from kings and presidents to generals and infantrymen, adults and children, every race, every continent, every country, and every era have been changed by the inspired words of that book.
Life change is what we would expect from a book that claims to be God’s very words. Consider these verses from Psalm 119:
“Happy are all those who keep His decrees and seek Him with all their heart. They do nothing wrong; they follow His ways.” (vs. 3, 4) “I delight in Your statutes; I will not forget Your word.” (v. 16) “I thought about my ways and turned my steps back to Your decrees.” (v. 59)3
The Bible is trustworthy. Read it, study it, memorize it, live it, love it, treasure it, and be changed by it.
Yours for the Great Commission,
Ronnie W. Floyd
Senior Pastor, Cross Church
General Editor, Bible Studies for Life
1–Bible Studies for Life: Honest to God, by Robert Jeffress
2-Ibid.
3-All verses Holman Christian Standard Bible
What About Those Who Have Never Heard the Gospel?
There are plenty of difficult questions Christians must answer regarding how God acts in this world. Perhaps the most often asked is, “If God is good, why is there evil in the world?” Another difficult question is, “What happens to people who have never heard the gospel?”
Christians generally acknowledge that people who reject the gospel are eternally condemned. But what about those who do not hear the gospel? What about people who have been cut off from Christianity and have never heard the name of Jesus? Are they condemned, or does God give them some kind of pass and allow them into heaven?
Believers need not speculate on this matter. God has not remained silent.
No excuses
In a recent post, I talked about how God has revealed Himself in both general and special revelation. Revelation means that God has not remained silent. People of every language and tribe can recognize His existence because of creation.
The hard question comes in the space between general and special revelation, those caught in the information gap. Are they condemned?
Paul addressed this situation in Romans 1, saying, “For God’s wrath is revealed from heaven against all godlessness and unrighteousness of people who by their unrighteousness suppress the truth, since what can be known about God is evident among them, because God has shown it to them” (vs. 18, 19, HCSB). The result of this revealed truth, Paul continues, is that “people are without excuse.” So while it is easy to think of innocent people who have never heard the gospel, God says no such innocent people exist.
What then?
God has made a way for them to hear the gospel! He called and commissioned His people – first the nation of Israel, then the church – to bear witness to His light. God has placed missionaries the world over.
A recent lesson in Bible Studies for Life noted, “Whether we are members of a pagan tribe in the isolated depths of another continent or managers of great wealth in a bustling city in America, the Bible declares us to be without excuse before the throne of a holy God. This is definitely bad news. But there is good news. The gospel of Jesus Christ offers hope to all of us who are without excuse.”1
The burden is on us
The simple fact is this: there are some people who die without Christ, eternally separated from God, not because God does not care but because we do not. God did something only He could do (provide a sacrifice for sin) and empowered us to do what we must do (take the gospel to the ends of the earth). The burden is no longer on God; the burden is on us.
Perhaps this is why the Bible describes those who bring the gospel as having beautiful feet (Isaiah 52:7). Rather than being content to have millions die without Christ, we will live in the power of the Holy Spirit to take the gospel to them. What a blessing it will be to see those who are in darkness come to know Jesus, the Light of life, in this life and the next.
Yours for the Great Commission,
Ronnie W. Floyd
Senior Pastor, Cross Church
General Editor, Bible Studies for Life