Dr. John Ankerberg:
Is it really possible that the Bible is a book that
conveys the very ideas and thoughts of Almighty God?
Well, in this series we’re going to seriously examine
the questions: Is the Bible really the Word of God or
nothing more than another collection of the words of
men? If it is the Word of God, how do we know that
this information came from God, and what was the
process God used to get it to us? Some people say,
some parts of the Bible came from God, but then add,
"there are also a lot of errors in it." My guest today
is philosopher and theologian Dr. Norman Geisler, Dean
of Southern Evangelical Seminary. I asked him to start
us off by answering the question, "Does it matter
whether or not there are errors in the Bible?"
Dr. Norman Geisler:
Is it dangerous to live downstream from a cracked dam?
Ask the people in Taccoa Falls, Georgia. A little
college town nestled in the valley there; beautiful
waterfalls. Behind it, the Army Corp of Engineers
said, "The little hairline crack in the dam won’t
matter." One night, the dam burst and the waters swept
down the valley and dozens of people were killed. It’s
dangerous to live downstream from a cracked dam.
What’s the "cracked
dam"? There are people telling us there are errors in
the Bible–just small ones, not big ones–just little
ones, just a crack in the dam. Are there errors in the
Bible or is the Bible the inerrant Word of God?
Psalm 11:3 says, "If
the foundation be destroyed, what shall the righteous
do?"
Is the Bible the Word
of God? Or is it the words of men? The Bible claims
to be the Word of God and the Bible proves to
be the Word of God. We’re going to show how this is
the only book in the world that really claims to be,
and proves to be, the Word of God.
Ankerberg:
Now, there is no use thinking that the Bible came from
God unless it specifically claims to be from God.
Maybe you are not aware of the fact that there are not
a whole lot of books that claim to be the Word of God
to man. Obviously there are some and we will talk
about them later. We will see that just because a book
claims to be the Word of God, that doesn’t mean it is
the Word of God. There must be evidence, there must be
proof, that backs up such a claim. As we will see, the
Bible supplies evidence that it did come from God. But
right now, "Does the Bible claim to be the Word of
God?" Does it say it just once or twice in a
mysterious way? Or does it clearly, over and over,
make this claim? Dr. Geisler tells us.
Geisler:
First of all, the Bible claims to be the Word of God
literally hundreds of times. It says, "Thus saith the
Lord...." "The word of the Lord came to me...."
Summarized very beautifully by two New Testament
Scriptures:
2 Timothy 3:16: "All
Scripture is inspired by God." Now, to be inspired
means "to breathe into," not to breathe out. It’s the
Greek word theopneustos. All Scripture is
breathed out of the very mouth of God.
Matthew 4:4: "A man
shall not live by bread alone but by every word that
proceedeth out of the mouth of God."
David on his deathbed
in 2 Samuel 23 said, "His word was on my tongue."
The Bible claims
to be the Word of God. If the New Testament is
Scripture and the Bible is said to be inspired
Scripture, then the New Testament is also inspired
Scripture, not just the Old Testament. So what is true
of the Old Testament is also claimed in the New
Testament. For example, Peter said in 2 Peter 3:16
that Paul’s writings were inspired. In fact, in 1
Timothy 5:18 it quotes the Gospels as being inspired
Scripture right alongside the Old Testament. So, it’s
not just referring to the Old Testament when it says
"inspired," it’s referring to the New Testament as
well.
Ankerberg:
Now, what do you think the Apostle Peter and the Lord
Jesus Christ Himself thought about the Bible? Did they
teach that the words in the Bible came from God?
Geisler:
There’s another important passage in 2 Peter 1:20,21.
It says all the prophetic writings came as people were
moved by the Holy Spirit. The word there is the
same word used for a wind blowing on a sailboat–moved
along by the Holy Spirit. They did not come from the
will of men but from the will of God.
Now, all prophetic
writings are inspired, and the New Testament is also a
prophetic writing because it says it was written by
apostles and prophets–Ephesians 2:20 and Ephesians
3:5. And even John was called a prophet in Revelation
22:18. If all Scripture is prophetic and the New
Testament is also prophetic, then the New Testament is
inspired Scripture as well.
So we have literally
hundreds of claims in the Bible in addition to crucial
verses that tell us that the Bible claims to be the
Word of God. In fact, let me mention one other thing.
Jesus said that the Bible is the Word of God. He said
in Matthew 5 that the Bible is imperishable–"not a jot
or tittle will pass away until all is fulfilled." He
said in John 10:35 the "scripture cannot be broken."
It’s literally unbreakable. He said it’s exalted above
all human tradition, in Matthew 15. "You have made the
word of God void with your tradition," He said to the
Pharisees. He said the Bible can be trusted when it
talks about history, when it talks about origins, when
it talks about science. He quoted Adam and Eve as
being the first literal pair created by God. "Jesus
said it, that settles it." We used to sing the song in
Sunday School. If Christ, the Son of God, said the
Bible is the Word of God, then the Bible must
be the Word of God or else Christ is not the Son of
God.
Ankerberg:
So the Bible claims to be from God; the Apostle Peter
said the prophetic writings came as people "were moved
by the Holy Spirit" and Jesus Christ, the Son of God,
said the Bible is the Word of God. But there is
additional evidence that shows the Bible claims to be
the Word of God.
Geisler:
Another way to look at it is the Bible claims to be
the Word of God by saying that what God said in the
Old Testament, it was really what the Bible said in
the New Testament.
Let’s take a look at
this chart. What Scripture says, God says. In the left
column, "God says," in the right column, "The
Scripture says."
For example, in Genesis
12:3, "The Lord said to Abraham." But in the New
Testament, when that is quoted, it’s the Scriptures
saying to Abraham. Why? Because what God says, the
Bible says; and what the Bible says, God says. It
works both ways.
For example, Genesis
2:24 the Scripture says, that is, the author of
Genesis said, "For this cause shall a man leave his
father and mother." But when that passage is quoted in
the New Testament by Jesus in Matthew 19, it says, "God
said, ‘For this cause shall a man leave his father
and mother."
Now, let’s think about
this for a moment. What the Bible says, God says; and
what God says, the Bible says. The Bible claims to be
the very words of God. Not just ideas, not just
thoughts. Paul in 1 Corinthians 2:13 says these are
Spirit-taught words. David on his deathbed said the
Holy Spirit spoke by men–"His word was on my tongue."
2 Timothy 3:16, "The Scripture"–the writings, the
graphae–"are breathed out by God."
"Every word that comes
out of the mouth of God"–Matthew 4:4. This book claims
to be the very verbally-inspired Word of God.
Ankerberg:
Next, what about the Old Testament and the New
Testament? Are they both stated to be the Word of God
by the Bible itself? Dr. Geisler tells us.
Geisler:
But what about the New Testament? Is it the inspired
Word of God? Many of the verses we just quoted refer
to the Old Testament because the New Testament wasn’t
written when Jesus was speaking.
The Word of God is
inspired. The New Testament is also the Word of
God–Hebrews 4:12 talks about the Word of God being
"alive and powerful." Therefore, the New Testament is
inspired as well. It’s not just the Old Testament that
claims to be the truth of God, but every book in the
New Testament claims to come from an apostle or a
prophet of God. So the entire Bible, Old and New
Testaments, claim to be the Word of God.
Ankerberg:
Now, from this evidence, I think you would agree that
at least the Bible claims to be the Word of
God. But because the Bible claims to be the
Word of God, is that why Christians believe it? No.
Dr. Geisler received his Ph.D. in philosophy and
explains that Christians are not using the Bible to
prove the Bible.
Geisler:
Now let’s remember, we’re not using the Bible to prove
the Bible here. We’re simply saying, "What does the
Bible claim for itself? It’s like asking me, "Who are
you?" And I say, "My name is Norman Geisler. I live in
Charlotte, North Carolina." You could verify whether
that’s true. We’re simply asking, "What does the Bible
say about itself? What does the Bible claim?" And the
Bible claims in a short sentence or two to be the very
written Word of God, from God, through men of God, to
the people of God.
Now the question is, Is
what the Bible claims to be true really true? What are
the credentials for this claim?
Of course, any book can
claim to be inspired. The Koran claims to be inspired.
Muslims believe it’s the very word of God. The
Bhagavad Gita of the Hindus, claims to be the inspired
word of God. Mormons claim the Book of Mormon is the
word of God. So we’ve got a lot of books out there
saying, "I am the Word of God!" How do we know which
one is the Word of God. What’s the credential,
what are the evidences, for the Bible being the Word
of God?
First of all, the Bible
claims to be and proves to be the Word of God in a way
that no other book in the world proves to be what it
claims to be. The Bible is supernaturally confirmed.
Miracles are acts of God to demonstrate that a prophet
of God is telling the truth of God. For example, when
Moses was called by God to go and talk to his people,
Moses said, "They won’t believe me!"
God said, "Stick you
hand in your bosom. Pull it out." It was leprous.
"Put it back in your
bosom. Pull it out." It was healed.
"Take your rod. Throw
it on the ground." It became a serpent.
"Pick it up." It became
a rod in his hand.
"Strike the water." And
the water divided and the people walked across. In
other words, He gave His prophets miracles to confirm
who they were.
The same thing was true
of Elijah in 1 Kings 18. Who is the true God, Yahweh
or Baal?
Okay. Pray to Baal. If
a fire comes down from heaven, then Baal is God.
It didn’t come.
Okay, pray to Yahweh.
Elijah prayed to Yahweh. Fire came down, consumed the
sacrifice, licked up the water, and Elijah said, "Any
more questions?" In other words, God confirmed who His
prophets were by miracles.
The same thing is said
in the New Testament. Acts 2:22. Jesus, "a man
confirmed by signs and wonders." Even Nicodemus, who
came to Jesus by night, said, "We know you are a
teacher come from God because nobody can do the
miracles that you do except God be with him."
Hebrews 2:3,4 says,
"They were confirmed by signs and wonders." This is
the only book in the world that is confirmed by
acts of God to be the Word of God.
Ankerberg:
Now, we’ve seen that the Bible claims to be the Word
of God but some other religious books do as well.
Let’s compare the evidence the Bible offers as proof
for being the unique Word of God with the Baghavad
Gita of the Hindus, the Koran of the Muslims, and The
Book of Mormon of the Mormons.
Geisler:
Let’s take a look by comparison at some of these other
books. Are there miracles in the Bhagavad Gita, the
Hindus saying that this is the word of God? There were
no miracles. How about the Koran? As a matter of fact,
in the Koran Mohammad refused to perform miracles. And
the interesting thing is, they say Jesus performed
miracles in the Koran, including resurrecting from the
dead. They say God used to perform miracles through
His prophets to confirm that they were prophets. And
then when Mohammad himself was asked, "Perform a
miracle to prove that you’re a prophet," he said,
"Here, read this Sura, read this chapter of the
Koran." In other words, he couldn’t come forth with
the credentials. He had the claim, but he had no
credentials to prove it.
What about the Book of
Mormon? The Mormons say that’s the Word of God. The
problem is, the Bible tells us one way you can test to
see whether a prophet is telling the truth or not is
whether he makes prophecies that are false.
Deuteronomy 18.
Joseph Smith predicted
that the temple would be rebuilt in Zion, Missouri and
even gave the date for it. Didn’t happen. False
prophecy.
The Bible gives
hundreds of predictions years in advance that are
literally true, and I want to take a look at those in
a little more detail.
The Bible claims to be
the Word of God and the Bible proves to be the Word of
God.
Number one, it proves
to be because the authors of Scripture were
confirmed by miracles. Moses, Elijah, Jesus, the
New Testament writers, the Apostle Paul.
Second, the Bible
proves to be the Word of God by supernatural
predictions made hundreds of years in advance.
There is no other book in the world where there are
literally hundreds of predictions made hundreds of
years in advance, even by the dates that critics
accept, that came literally true.
For example, the Bible
predicted that Jesus would be born of a woman in
Genesis 3:15; that He would come from the seed of
Abraham (Genesis 12); that He would come from the
tribe of Judah in Genesis 49; that He would come of
the dynasty of David in 2 Samuel 7; that He would be
born of a virgin (Isaiah 7:14); that He would be born
in the city of Bethlehem in Micah 5:2; and that He
would be crucified–get this–that He would be crucified
and killed 483 years after 444 B.C., which is exactly
what happened in Daniel 9. Because Daniel said, "Four
hundred and eighty-three years from the time of the
command to build the temple, rebuild the city of
Jerusalem, that the Messiah would be cut off." That
happened literally because between 444 B.C. and 33
A.D. it is literally 483 years.
You say, "Wait a
minute. You must be on modern math. Much learning doth
make thee mad." No. Four hundred and forty-four plus
33 is 477. But these are lunar years of 360 days.
Twelve times 30 is the Jewish calendar. You have to
add five more days. So five days times 483 years is
six more years and 477 and six is 483 exactly.
Now, show me any book
in the world that predicted something that would
happen hundreds of years in advance, what city, how,
what year, what dynasty, what ethnic group. Jesus came
and literally fulfilled all these predictions. This is
a supernatural book.
Ankerberg:
Now, in listening to what Dr. Geisler just said about
fulfilled prophecy being proof that the Bible came
from God, maybe you’re wondering, Are biblical
prophecies the same as the psychic predictions being
made in the tabloids at the supermarket? The answer
is, "No." Dr. Geisler explains the big difference.
Geisler:
You’ve heard skeptics say, "Well, what’s so great
about that? Psychics make predictions, too." Well,
they do. But the problem is, they’re usually wrong.
Several years ago they did a study of psychics’
predictions for that year and found out they were 90
percent wrong. In fact, just a couple years ago, of
all the specific predictions that were made by
psychics, they were 100 percent wrong on that year.
"Well, didn’t Jeane
Dixon make great predictions about Kennedy’s
assassination?"
Well, number one, she
never mentioned Kennedy. And number two, she never
mentioned the means of assassination. All she said was
a Democrat would die in office. And in a 20 year cycle
they had been doing that for the last 100 years or
more, but what they don’t tell you is that she, like
the rest of the psychics, is wrong 80 to 90 percent of
the time.
For example, she
predicted that Jacqueline Kennedy would not remarry.
She remarried the next day Aristotle Onassis. Not a
very good prediction.
So the Bible claims to
be and the Bible proves to be the Word of God. It
proves to be because the authors were supernaturally
confirmed. It proves to be because there were
supernatural predictions made hundreds of years in
advance that literally came true. It also proves to be
because the Bible has amazing unity. It was
written by 40 people over a period of 1500 years in
two different languages–Hebrew in the Old Testament;
Greek in the New Testament–on hundreds of different
topics. And yet, it has amazing unity. The same story
from beginning to end. God created man; he fell.
Christ was sent to save us. He’s going to come back to
defeat evil and bring in the eternal kingdom. No other
book in the world written by 40 authors over 1500
years on a similar topic with hundreds of little
sub-topics would ever come out with this kind of
unity.
For example, take a
medical advisor. Suppose we had 40 doctors over 1500
years telling us the solution to sickness. One chapter
would read, "It’s all in demons." Another chapter
would read, "Well, it’s in the blood. The
blood-letters from the barber pole, you know. Take the
blood out. George Washington died probably from
blood-letters.
Another chapter would
say, "It’s all in your mind."
It would have unity.
The Bible has the same problem, the same solution,
with all this great diversity, this amazing unity. It
shows there must be one Mind behind it using these
authors to bring about these marvelous truths. The
Bible claims to be and proves to be the Word of God by
supernatural miracles, by amazing predictions, and by
incredible unity.
(Transcribed from our
series Is the Bible Unique or Just Another
Religious Book?)