Thy Word Is Truth (The Inspiration of the Scriptures - by DR WALTER MARTIN)
More than thirty-five years ago, over the door of a small brick chapel, I first saw
the sentence "THY WORD IS TRUTH’ (John 17:17). The chapel belonged to the Stony
Brook School on Long Island. Here, as a religious but agnostic teenager, I had been
sent into social exile by my parents. It was not that they wanted to isolate me from
society (for Stony Brook School was far from such an isolation), but simply that they
wanted me to be disciplined in both intellect and will. And what better place could
I be sent, they reasoned, than to a school that had as its motto "CHARACTER BEFORE CAREER"?
It was at Stony Brook School (then, as now, a bastion of evangelical Christianity) that
I first came to know Him "OF WHOM MOSES IN THE LAW, AND THE PROPHETS, DID WRITE, JESUS
OF NAZARETH. . . " (John 1:45)
It was necessary for me as part of my education at Stony Brook to study the Bible,
which I had always regarded with respect but never in the light of absolute spiritual
authority. With the brash skepticism of youth and inexperience, I questioned everything
I read and plagued my teachers, including the learned headmaster Dr. Frank Gaebelein,
with literally hundreds of questions. The end product of this quest was a journey from
doubt to faith, accompanied by the fruit of genuine faith - an enduring experience with God.
It is therefore possible for me to understand the mind of the skeptic, the agnostic, and
the professional scoffer, since I have worn all their boots at one time or another and
have followed the same old arguments to their dismal and fruitless conclusion - the
absurdity of life and the purposelessness of existence apart from the living God.
In the brief span of this chapter it is impossible, of course, to treat in depth
the subject of Biblical inspiration. In the final analysis, "HE THAT COMETH TO GOD
MUST BELIEVE THAT HE IS, AND THAT HE IS A REWARDER OF THEM THAT DILIGENTLY SEEK
HIM." (Hebrews 11:6) No amount of argument or evidence conjured or amassed by the
human mind can convince a skeptic that God has spoken until God has been permitted
to speak to him. If, as the Bible teaches, the soul of man is a locked door, the
handle being inside, so that the knock of God must be responded to from within,
then ultimately it will be His grace alone which enables us to turn the key and
the handle so that the light of heaven may illumine the darkness of our sins.
This chapter, then, is not intended to be an exhaustic apologetic for the inspiration
or authenticity of the Bible. Rather, it is an attempt to answer some questions which
are frequently asked about the Scriptures, and to set forth in clear, nontechnical
language precisely what the Christian church means when it speaks about the authority
and inspiration of divine revelation. Many excellent works have been written which
point out the historical accuracy and prophetic validity of Biblical data. The science
of archeology has in the last hundred years confirmed in startling detail what patient
scholars of the Bible have always believed - that it is an enormously reliable book,
completely trustworthy, and remarkably relevant.
What do we mean, then, when we say, "The Bible is the Word of God"? It is obvious that
we are asserting that the Bible is a revelation from God - that it does not just
illumine our thinking but reveals to our minds things which God knows and which we
are incapable of learning apart from His communication with us.
What we mean when we talk about the Bible as the Word of God is that it is a
compilation of 66 books which span as period of more than 5,000 years and were
written by multiple authors, all of whom testify to the fact that they had an
experience with a spiritual Being whom they described as "the Lord" or "the Eternal One."
It therefore cannot be asserted logically that the Christian is arguing in a circle
because he allegedly quotes the Bible to prove the Bible, as some critics maintain.
The Bible is not one book but many, written by people of different time periods. All
of whom bear witness to their relationship with an ultradimensional Being who lives
outside our time-space continuum - a Being who wishes us to know that He is our Creator
and desires to be our loving heavenly Father.*-+
The error arises when we think of the Bible as one book, since in reality it is a
COLLECTION OF BOOKS. The testimony of the authors must be accepted as independent
evidence unless it can be shown conclusively that there was either collusion of
deception on their part. It should be strongly emphasized that such collusion has
never been proven - in fact, quite the opposite is the case.
Since the Bible is a collection of books, it contains quotations from men (Acts 17:28),
angels (Matthew 1:20), demons (Mark 5:9), Satan (Job 1:9), and God Himself
(Exodus 20:1 ff.) However, the Bible is called the Word of God because the whole
transcript is an inspired, faithful, and infallible record of what God intended us
to know about Himself, the cosmos in which we live, our spiritual allies and
adversaries, and our fellow man. The Bible, then, was produced by men whose
recording of events was divinely supervised and preserved from all the frailties
of human error and judgment which are so common in all other religious literature.
How could such faithful recording come about? By what method could God bring such a
thing to pass? Such questions can be answered simply by pointing out an illustration
from the late Donald Grey Barnhouse. Dr. Barnhouse maintained that, even as the Holy
Spirit came upon the womb of the Virgin Mary and, despite her sinful nature, imperfections,
and limitations, produced the sinless and perfect character who is called the Son of God,
so He moved upon the minds and spirits of the recorders of Scripture that, despite
limitations in language, culture, and even scientific knowledge, He produced His perfect
message to mankind. Both phenomena were miraculous; both were perfect births - one of
the Son of Man and the other of a Book, the Word of God. When we speak of the
inspiration of the Scriptures, then, we are talking about the process that God used
to convey His message. This process is described by the Apostle Paul as atype of
spiritual "breathing." In fact, the Greek word theopneustos literally means "God
-breathed."
The inspiration of the Bible and the concepts just mentioned refer only to the initial
"breathing" of God upon the authors of Scripture to produce a copy of His thoughts for
man. It is for this original text of Scripture, revealed by God and faithfully recorded
by His servants, that the Christian church claims infallibility. Through the centuries
God has preserved literally thousands of copies and fragments of these initial manuscripts
with only minor transmissional mistakes made by scribes over the years. Historic
Christianity affirms the plenary or "full" inspiration of the Bible, and it further
holds that inspired concepts can be communicated only by inspired words. Thus,
the church’s belief in the verbal inspiration of the Bible is logically inseparable
from the doctrine of plenary inspiration.
To illustrate, the label on all RCA records contained a picture of a dog listening to an
old Victrola with the caption "HIS MASTER’S VOICE." Dr. Eugene Nida of the translation
department of the American Bible Society has pointed out that the dog listening to the
Victrola will hear an imperfect transmission of his master’s voice because the needle
scratches the surface of the record. However, no matter how scratchy the record sounds,
the needle cannot obliterate the sound of the master’s voice - THE MESSAGE STILL COMES
THROUGH.
[Thy Word Is Truth Part II]
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