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The
Battle for the Bible
by Prof. Herman C. Hanko
Professor of Church History and New Testament
in the Protestant Reformed Seminary
Published
by:
Peace Protestant Reformed Church
18423 Stony Island Ave. • Lansing, IL 60438
(PRC web page - http://www.prca.org)
Preface
The church today has lost its spiritual moorings.
This is evident from the introduction into the church of various
heresies which have infiltrated the church and have sapped her
spiritual life. Almost all evangelical and Reformed churches, e.g.,
have abandoned the truth concerning creation in six days of twenty-four
hours and have capitulated to evolutionism. Further, it is becoming
increasingly common in evangelical churches to open the special offices
in the church to women, a novelty which denies the validity of the
church's position for over 1,500 years of New Testament history.
In many cases, those who have adopted such
positions claim to hold to the truth of Scripture. More particularly,
they claim to hold to the infallible inspiration of Scripture.
How can this be when Scripture is clear on these issues and both are
expressly and strongly condemned by the Word of God?
The answer is easy to find. The claim of belief in
an infallible Scripture is a hollow one, for key truths concerning
Scripture have been denied.
This pamphlet exposes these erroneous views of Scripture and lays bare
the wrong views of Scripture which are so commonly held and which open
the door to heresy.
The pamphlet was first delivered as a speech under
the sponsorship of the Evangelism Committee of Peace Protestant
Reformed Church in Lansing, Illinois. It has been revised and edited to
make it suitable for publication in pamphlet form.
May God use this pamphlet to strengthen the faith
of those who still fight the battle for the truth of Scripture; and may
it serve to bring many to faith in Scripture's infallible inspiration.
Professor
Herman Hanko,
October, 1993
Introduction
In a certain sense of the word, the title of this
pamphlet is a misnomer because it is really impossible, and certainly
not necessary, to fight a battle for the Bible. If it is true, as we
firmly believe, that the Bible is God's Word, the Bible will endure
until the very end. The Bible does not need our defense. It will endure
because it is God's Word. It is impervious to attack.
In another sense of the word, however, it is
important that we fight for the Bible because the truth concerning the
Bible is part of the confession of the church of Jesus Christ. We are
called upon to defend this confession in the world. It is my purpose to
defend that confession in this pamphlet.
Higher Criticism's Attack On Scripture
It is quite surprising that only in the last two or
three hundred years has the battle for the Bible had to be fought.
Until the time of the Reformation, and even for a century or a century
and a half after the Reformation, there was no need to defend the truth
that the Bible is the Word of God because everyone who belonged to the
church believed it. The Roman Catholic Church did some terrible things
to the Bible. It took the Bible away from the common people of God. It
said it was dangerous for the people of God to have the Bible in their
possession because the Bible was a book difficult to understand. But
the Roman Catholic Church never questioned that the Bible was the Word
of God.
For many years after the Reformation, the church as a whole also
believed in the truth of Scripture. It is only in relatively recent
times that the church has been called upon to defend the truth that the
Bible is indeed the Word of God.
The first attacks against the Bible began with what is known as Higher
Criticism, which had its origin in Germany somewhere around the end of
the seventeenth century and the beginning of the eighteenth century.
This higher criticism arose out of the development of modern philosophy
and is really a child born from the womb of rationalism. Higher
criticism was not found in the church, but in those who dabbled in
philosophical matters. It was characteristic of such higher criticism
that it denied that the Bible was the Word of God; that is, it denied
that the Bible was the Word of God in any kind of a way that was
important or significant. It insisted that the Bible was a human
production, produced by the church in many bygone centuries to express
what the church said concerning God. It is an inspiring book; it is a
noble record of a church of centuries past; it can even serve as
inspiration to us; it can serve in some respects as instruction; one
can be edified by it; its soaring prophecies, its lofty poetry, and its
noble thoughts certainly are worth preserving for generations to come.
But in no significant way can it be called the Word of God. It is the
word of men, men of genius perhaps, but words of men for all that.
I shall not concern myself with higher criticism at
this time, although it is still prevalent in the churches, continues to
plague many institutions of higher learning, and has entered into the
warp and woof of the thinking of many denominations. Those who deny
flatly that the Bible is the Word of God are on the periphery of the
church and are of little or no concern to me.
It is true that in the last decade or so there are
those in denominations which call themselves Reformed who, in the
interests of various theological aberrations, are bold to say that the
Bible in no meaningful way can be called the Word of God. That is
disconcerting, appalling, and a troublesome development. Nevertheless,
my main concern is not with outright denials of Scripture as God's Word.
A More Insidious Denial of Scripture
My main concern is with those who profess to
believe that the Bible is the Word of God and yet by, what I can only
call, surreptitious and devious means, deny it. This is, surprisingly
enough, a position that is taken widely in the evangelical world.
Almost all of the literature which is produced in the evangelical world
today falls into this category. In the October, 1985 issue of
Christianity Today, (the very popular and probably most influential
voice of evangelicals in America), a symposium on Bible criticism was
featured. The articles were written by scholars from several
evangelical seminaries. Not one of the participants in that symposium
in Christianity Today was prepared to reject higher criticism. All came
to its defense. It became evident that all the scholars from the
leading seminaries in this country held to a form of higher criticism.
These men claim to believe that the Bible is the
Word of God. At the same time they adopt higher critical methods in the
explanation of the Scriptures. This has become so common in evangelical
circles that it is almost impossible to find an evangelical professor
in the theological schools of our land and abroad who still holds
uncompromisingly to the doctrine of the infallible inspiration of the
Scriptures. The insidious danger is that higher criticism is promoted
by those who claim to believe in infallible inspiration.
Ways In Which Inspiration Is Denied
The truth of the infallible inspiration of the Holy
Scriptures is denied in different ways by those who claim to believe
this truth.
It is sometimes denied by insisting that, although
the Scriptures are infallibly inspired, nevertheless they reflect the
mistaken notions and viewpoints of the men whom God used to write them.
They reflect a bygone culture. They reflect scientific views that we
know today are no longer true but which were considered true by Paul or
Peter or Matthew or Moses. And so, it is said, although the Bible is
inspired infallibly, nevertheless God saw to it that the human element
in Scripture was not so overruled that the mistaken and erroneous views
of these men were kept from Holy Writ.
This view of Scripture is used to justify
unbiblical positions. Those who defend an evolutionary concept of the
origin of the world are quick to insist that they believe that the
Bible is the Word of God. If you charge them with denying that the
Bible is the Word of God they become extraordinarily exercised and
accuse those who charge them with denying inspiration as guilty of
slander. At the same time, however, they defend their evolutionism on
the grounds that the record of creation, as found in Genesis 1, is not
to be taken literally. It may be saga; it may be myth; it may be a
doxology which was intended by the church to praise God, the Creator;
it may be packaging. But whatever it is, it is not to be taken
literally. When God says, "Day," He does not mean day but something
different. In that way they claim to hold to the Scriptures as the Word
of God while introducing into the Scriptures heresy.
The same is true of the struggle that is going on
at present in the church world over the question of whether or not
women may hold ecclesiastical office. There are some who say that,
although there are certain passages in Scripture which clearly forbid
women to hold ecclesiastical office, nevertheless those passages
reflect the culture of the times. Perhaps they are only written because
of particular and unique problems that existed in the church of Ephesus
where Timothy was pastor, or in the church of Corinth to which the
first and second epistle to the Corinthians were addressed. But these
passages are not relevant to today's world. Or, if they do not reflect
particular problems that existed in the church of Ephesus or Corinth,
they reflect personal opinions which Paul himself held concerning what
was best for the church. But in today's world and in our modern age,
those injunctions of the Scriptures are no longer relevant.
Others defend the right of women to hold
ecclesiastical office by claiming that Scripture is subject to
differences of interpretation. We all believe in the Scriptures as the
Word of God. We all accept the same principles of interpretation. But
when we apply those principles, they yield different results. Howard D.
VanderWiel, for example, in the Banner of March 2, 1992 explains the
recent controversy in the Christian Reformed Church over women in
office as being "differences in interpretation." And his point is that
all in the Christian Reformed Church agree on the doctrine of
Scripture, but these differences are legitimate differences of
interpretation and both must be tolerated. Dr. John W. Cooper, in a
pamphlet put out under the endorsement of Calvin Theological Seminary,
which pamphlet is entitled "A Cause for Division? Women in Office and
the Unity of the Church," took the same fundamental position. We are
all agreed that Scripture is the Word of God. We are all agreed on the
principles of interpretation. But when we apply those principles we
happen to come up with different ideas concerning what they mean. And,
therefore, these differences must be tolerated in the church.
That point has been stretched almost beyond
endurance. In a recent article, Hendrick Hart, on the basis of this
same principle and appealing, in fact, to the pamphlet written by Dr.
Cooper, defends homosexuality. He ascribes homosexuality to the fact
that, while indeed there are some passages in Scripture which can be
interpreted as condemning homosexuality, nevertheless "changed
historical circumstances invite the church to deal with biblical
passages on homosexuality as we have dealt with passages on slavery,
usury, war, or the role of women. With these profoundly historical
understandings and situations we have been reassured that we need not
read the Bible as calling for the very same attitudes called for in
biblical times" (Reformed Believers Press Service News Release, August
28, 1992).
The Underlying Error of These Views
If you will examine these positions, you will find
that in them all there is one common theme. That one theme is this: A
great deal of emphasis is placed upon the fact that the Bible contains
a human element or a human factor. That human element or factor is
explained in terms of the fact that God chose men to write the Bible.
He chose a Moses, an Isaiah, a Hosea, a Luke, a Peter, a Jude. And when
He chose these men to write the Scriptures, He chose men who lived in
particular times in the history of the world, men who had particular
gifts, men who had particular character traits, men who held to
particular views that were formed in the culture in which they lived
and from which they could not escape and, therefore, men whose
personality, peculiarities, unique gifts, and cultural influences are
all reflected in the Scriptures. They will point out to you that it
would have been impossible for the apostle Paul to write Psalm 23. Only
a poet could write the beautiful and moving words of that familiar
Psalm. It took an Isaiah to fill the earth with the soaring prophecies
that have stirred the hearts of God's people over the ages. Peter could
not have written those prophecies. Isaiah was the man who had the
gifts, the talents, the abilities, character, and personality that was
required to write those prophecies. His personality is indelibly
stamped upon his writings. There are vast differences between the
Proverbs of Solomon and the staid prose of Matthew, the publican. All
you have to do is read the Bible and you will discover this truth.
In support of this position, such higher critics
appeal to history and remind us that the church has never denied the
human element in Scripture.
If the objection is raised that there is no human element in the
Scriptures then, rather mockingly, the response is that a denial of the
human element in Scripture implies a mechanical theory of inspiration.
It is sometimes called the typewriter theory. The authors of Scripture
acted only as secretaries that typed at the dictation of the Holy
Spirit so that in no way did their own character or personality impress
itself upon the Word of God. If Scripture has no human element the
Bible simply dropped from heaven and fell to earth with a plop. And
this is an obvious denial of the true character of Scripture.
What is not mentioned and conveniently forgotten is
that, although it is true that our Reformed fathers in the past
sometimes spoke of a human element in Scripture, they nevertheless
maintained that the Bible is in every part the Word of God. They
believed this with all their hearts. Today's theologians believe this
no longer.
Does Scripture Contain a Human Element?
We must talk about this so?called human element in
the Scriptures. It is my judgment that although our Reformed fathers
sometimes used that expression and meant something perfectly innocent
by it, nevertheless, the day has come when we do better to drop it and
not speak of a human element in the Scriptures at all. It may be
objected that this is unscholarly but, having read for many years the
fruits of biblical scholarship, one can be pardoned for being cynical
about its products. The charge of lack of scholarship does not really
mean that much any more.
What those who insist on a human element in the
Scriptures forget is the doctrines of predestination and providence. It
is wrong to speak of a human element in the Scriptures because speaking
of a human element in the Scriptures implies a denial of the doctrines
of predestination and providence.
It is certainly true that God used men to write the
Scriptures. He used them in such a way that He did not over?ride their
personalities, gifts, writing styles, and cultural conditioning.
Nevertheless when God was making preparations to write Psalm 90 [the
song of Moses in the wilderness] He did not look about in the world
below to find someone who was suitable to pen the words of that psalm
for Him. His eyes did not light on Moses to consider the possibility
that Moses would perhaps be a suitable instrument to write Psalm 90. He
did not find men with gifts and discover men who had unique
capabilities and make use of men who happened to be present whom He
could use to accomplish His purpose. He determined them Himself from
all eternity. He did not find them already fashioned. He fashioned them
by His decree of providence. He eternally ordained in His counsel, that
there would be a Moses, born at a given time, trained for forty years
in the palace of Pharaoh, schooled in the school of God in the
wilderness of Sinai for another forty years, and who would be, by the
hand of God, shaped and formed, fitted and endowed with such gifts as
were necessary to write the first five books of the Bible. God ordained
Him. God prepared him. All that was required to make him suitable for
the work was God's work because the Bible was before the mind of God,
in its entirety, long before the world began. A Moses, a Zachariah, an
Ezekiel, a Daniel - all these and all the others were instruments
fashioned by the sovereign hand of the Creator to write that part of
the Bible assigned to them by God from all eternity. Yes, God used men.
But they were God's men, shaped and formed by the hands of the Almighty.
The Scriptures themselves never speak of a human
element in inspiration. You may look everywhere; it is in vain. Your
search will never produce any results. Not one passage in the whole of
the Word of God so much as suggests that the Scriptures have a human
element.
The two classical passages for the proof of the
infallible inspiration of the Scriptures demonstrate this. II Timothy
3:16 reads: "All Scripture is given by inspiration of God." That is,
all Scripture is God?breathed. Not, all Scripture is God?breathed, but
through human organs. The text does not say that all Scripture is
God-breathed, but by human means. No! All Scripture is God-breathed.
And it is only because of this that Scripture is "profitable for
doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in
righteousness." If you would qualify or modify the God-breathed
character of Scripture in any way you could not add the rest of what is
said concerning the Scriptures. It would lose its profitability if you
would interject into this truth the element of the work of man.
The classical passage in II Peter 1:20, 21 is
perhaps somewhat stronger: "No prophecy of the Scripture is of any
private interpretation." What does that mean? That means that there is
no prophecy of the Scriptures, no word of the Scripture, which is the
private opinion of those who wrote it. You will not find personal
opinions in the Scriptures. You will not find that Scripture expresses
the private ideas of those whom God used to write it.
In today's church world that statement of the Scriptures is flatly
denied. God says, "No prophecy of the Scripture is the personal opinion
of those whom God used to write it." Today, when it is pointed out to
those who so ardently and passionately defend women in office that the
Scriptures are opposed to this position, the answer is that this is the
private opinion of Paul. The Bible says no Scripture expresses any
private opinion.
The text explains why this is true: "Prophecy came
not in old time by the will of man." It was not the will of man that
brought about the Scriptures. His will did not play a role in the
writing of the Scriptures. His will did not become the fountain or
cause of what is found in the Scriptures. If the will of man played a
role in the writing of the Scriptures then you would expect, of course,
that there are personal and private opinions in the Scriptures. But
that is not the way Scripture came. There is no human element in the
Scriptures - not even the human element of the will of man.
How then did the Scriptures come into being? This
is the testimony of the Scriptures themselves: "Holy men of God spake
as they were moved by the Holy Ghost." Does that mean that Peter and
Paul were not sinners like you and me? No, they were sinners, too. But
when they wrote the Scriptures, they were holy men of God; that is,
they were preserved by the Holy Spirit from error. They were, in the
writing of the Scriptures, incapable of erring.
They spoke! How is it that they spoke? They were moved by the Holy
Ghost. It is striking that the word "moved" in II Peter 2:21 is the
same word that is used in the book of Acts to describe how a boat is
moved across the waters of the Mediterranean by the force of the wind
that fills the canvas of the sails and carries it along across the
waters. That is how they were "moved by the Holy Spirit." They were
carried along in such a way by the Holy Spirit that in the writing of
the Scriptures their own wills did not play a role.
The only explanation for the Scriptures, therefore, is that the Holy
Spirit moved them and they spoke as the Holy Spirit moved them. You do
not find a human element in that.
Scripture Is a Miracle
The Scriptures are a miracle. The Scriptures are a
miracle not in the loose sense in which we sometimes use that term: the
miracle of modern medicine, the miracle of modern surgery. But the
preparation of the Scriptures by the Holy Spirit is the same kind of
miracle as the fall of the walls of Jericho, as the water that came out
of the rock in Rephidim, as the manna that fell in the wilderness, as
the dead man who was raised from the grave by the bones of the prophet
Elisha, as the incarnation of our Lord Jesus Christ.
It belongs to all that the Bible describes as
miraculous. That is why, if you deny the exclusively divine origin of
the Scriptures, sooner or later you are bound to deny the other
miracles which Scripture records. The two belong together. The miracle
of Scripture's inspiration is a part of all the miraculous works of God
which culminate in the work of our Lord Jesus Christ. The miracles of
Scripture point to the miracle of salvation in Christ. The record of
the miracles is divinely given throughout sacred history as a miracle
in its own right. To deny one miracle is finally to deny them all.
Professor Ralph Janssen taught in the seminary of
the Christian Reformed Church in the early 1920s. He was deposed from
office for his views on Scripture. He denied their exclusive divine
origin. In doing this, he denied many of Scripture's miracles. But,
although at that time he was deposed from his office, his views have
won. He, first of all, insisted that the Scriptures have a human
element. He insisted that it is the business of the seminary to explain
that human element in Scripture. But this led to a denial of other
miracles. The water that came out of the rock at Rephidim was not water
that was created miraculously by God; it was there all the time. It
just so happened that when Moses hit the rock with his stick he hit a
piece of the rock where the rock was very thin and he broke through
that thin piece of rock to release the water. But the water had been
there all the time. Why had it been there all the time? Janssen's
answer was: Science has proved that there is no such thing as the
creation of new matter. The law of the conservation of matter and
energy means that the amount of matter and energy is stable and fixed.
God, having once created everything, never creates anything again.
Is it impossible that the God who created the
heavens and the earth and all that is in them could not create water in
the rock? Why is that impossible? Janssen said this contradicted
science. We cannot be contradicting science, after all, because science
is the general revelation of God. Science is the word of God, too. And
what science says is true. So there was no miracle at Rephidim.
There was no miracle when the Israelites picked up
manna. They found bushes in the wilderness which grew these little
white seeds on them. It seems strange that enough bushes could be found
in a wilderness where in the summer the temperatures reach 100+ degrees
to feed three and a half million people for forty years! But the denial
of the miracles began with an insistence on the human element in the
Scriptures. This led Janssen to a denial of other miracles. Scripture
is a part of the miracle, not only because it includes in it the record
of miracles. It is a part of God's miraculous work of salvation in
Christ. David alone could write Psalm 23; not Paul. It required a poet.
Nobody denies that. But that David could write Psalm 23 by the
inspiration of the Holy Spirit in such a way that it was totally God's
Word, so that David was carried along by the Holy Spirit as the wind
carries along a ship as it sails the waters of the sea, that is the
miracle of the Scriptures.
Those who want to talk about a human element in the
Scriptures today become so extraordinarily preoccupied with the human
element in the Scriptures that they rarely talk about the divine
element. That is, they rarely, if ever, talk of what God says in
Scripture. This leads to heresy.
"Openness to the possibility of the supernatural
does not imply the acceptance of every claim in Scripture that a
supernatural event has occurred. We need not force authors of Scripture
to agree on every subject" (New Testament Criticism and Interpretation,
ed. by D.A. Black & D.S. Dockery; p. 87). In other words, we
ought not to be surprised if the Scriptures contradict themselves. But
does the Holy Spirit contradict Himself? Did the Holy Spirit forget
what He said in Genesis so that He says something different in
Galatians? "Most modern scholars have given up believing that the
gospels may be viewed as historically reliable except in certain
places" (Idem., p. 508). These are the words of evangelical scholars.
The insistence on a human element in Scripture
leads to another error. Increasingly, theologians speak of the theology
of Paul, the theology of John, the eschatology of Peter, etc. It is
even sometimes maintained that Paul was not entirely in agreement with
Peter in, e.g., the area of eschatology.
But this is wrong. The very name, "Theology of
Paul," suggests that Paul's view of truth was of his own invention. But
even more than that, when such language is used, no mention is made of
the theology of the Holy Spirit. If the Scriptures are of divine
origin, the Scriptures contain God's theology. And the believer,
accepting the Scriptures as such, is interested only in God's theology.
He does not really care what Paul may have thought about
reconciliation. He is not interested in what John thought about the
doctrine of the last things. But the believer is vitally interested in
what God wrote about these things, for to believe what God says is to
be saved; to deny what God says is to perish.
And so such scholars become so preoccupied with
this human element in Scripture that they are intent on trying to
explain from a human point of view how the Scriptures came into being.
We are told, e.g., that if one really wants to know what the Scriptures
teach, and one has due regard for the human element, then one must
study the writings of the old Jewish rabbis against the background of
which the New Testament gospels were written. One must read books on
archaeology because the Scriptures can only be understood if one knows
the ancient cultures, a knowledge of which comes from bones and pieces
of pottery. One ought to read widely in the Jewish Talmud. One had
better be thoroughly acquainted not only with the Greek language but
with how Greek was used two hundred years before Christ was born, how
the language developed, and how Greek was used in the time in which
Jesus lived. How ministers are going to make two sermons a week I do
not know if all these things are necessary for an understanding of
Scripture. And I certainly do not have any idea how the people of God
are going to understand the Scriptures if they have to know all these
things. We do not have the time to read what the rabbis wrote. If what
the rabbis wrote is important to our understanding of Scripture then we
are never going to be able to understand the Word of God.
All this does not mean that a study of these things
cannot be an aid to Bible studies. But they are not essential to an
understanding of Scripture. A man who has not been trained in biology
certainly does not know as much about a rose bush as a horticulturist.
But this lack of knowledge does not mean that he cannot have roses in
his yard which he enjoys. And no one can say that he does not know a
rose. He may, in fact, know things about that rose which a specialist
in the field cannot know. Preoccupied with the details of the structure
of the plant, a specialist may have little time or inclination to enjoy
the beauty of the rose. So a believing child of God understands the
Scriptures in which he finds his salvation even though he is unaware of
the latest findings in archeology. He may, as a believer, know
Scripture in a way in which an archeologist never does: Scripture as
profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction
in righteousness.
The Bible Belongs to the Church
The Scriptures are a miracle - the great miracle of
the ages. The great miracle of God is the salvation of the church
through Jesus Christ.
Contrary to much popular understanding, the Scriptures are written for
the church. They are not written for the world at large. I am offended
when in universities there is a religion course which is entitled, "The
Bible as Literature." I am offended by that because a university does
not have any business taking my Bible and treating it in its religion
classes as a matter of literature. That is tantamount to their
discovering the letters of my wife that she wrote me before we were
married and taking them to a religion class and teaching a class about
the literature of my wife's letters that she wrote to me. The Bible
cannot be taught as literature.
This is not to say that it is not literature. It is
some of the most glorious and beautiful literature that has ever been
written. But it cannot be taught as literature. The Bible is for the
church. It is not for a university. The Bible is the love?letter of
Christ, the Bridegroom, to His elect bride. And what the Bible has to
say, therefore, is no one's business except that of the bride.
What is the message that rings through the
Scriptures from beginning to end? It is the great truth of Isaiah 40:1:
"Comfort ye, comfort ye, my people, said your God." Christ, the
Bridegroom, writes a personal, private letter of love to His bride so
that she may have that letter while they are separated from each other
for a little while. When they are together and the wedding is
consummated at the return of Christ there will not be any need for the
letter. But, in the meantime, the church has the letter. And it is hers!
The Scriptures and Sovereign Grace
One can maintain the truth concerning the Holy
Scriptures as the Word of God only if one maintains the fundamentally
Reformed truth that salvation is by grace alone.
What has happened in our day? The doctrine of sovereign grace has been
denied. The church has fallen into the error of Arminianism; i.e., that
there is a human element in the work of salvation; that man himself
must contribute something to his salvation. But if one introduces into
the work of salvation the work of man, this human element is also going
to be introduced into the inspiration of Scripture. The two stand or
fall together. If one introduces into the Scriptures a human element,
one will also introduce into the work of salvation a human element. If
salvation is the work of God, the Scriptures are the work of God. The
two stand or fall together.
No wonder that fundamentalist circles are always
fighting the battle for the Bible. Arminianism in soteriology leads to
Arminianism in Scripture. How can one expect to maintain that the Bible
is the Word of God when Arminianism in soteriology and in the doctrine
of salvation has become common doctrine? And how can a church today
piously pray for faith to believe an infallible inspiration of the
Scriptures when it has lost the doctrine of sovereign grace in the work
of salvation? The Scriptures belong to the work of salvation so much
that without the Scriptures there would be no salvation. Salvation
itself is dependent upon this book. That is the marvel of Scripture.
I do not know how often now you have read through
the Scriptures from cover to cover. But they are that kind of book that
every time you read them they are new and fresh. There are things in
the Scriptures that you never knew were there - treasures that are
mined from them. There is not another book in the whole world like
that! To believe them is to be saved.
The Miracle of Scripture's Power
I have a library full of books. When I read a book
I close it and say, "That's that. I read the book." I put it on the
shelf and say, "I don't have to read that book again. I know what's in
that book." But you can never do that with the Bible.
Let me tell you a little story. It is a story that
affected me profoundly. One of my professors in the days of my seminary
was Rev. Herman Hoeksema. We were sitting in the lounge having coffee
on his seventieth birthday. And as is characteristic of an old man on
his birthday he was reminiscing. In the course of his reminiscences he
made this astounding remark: "You know, men," he said, "from a certain
point of view I wish I could live another seventy years. I wish that
because now that I am seventy years old I think that I am beginning to
understand the Scriptures a little bit. And maybe in another seventy
years I could make some progress." But then he quickly shook his head
and said, "No, no. I don't want to live seventy more years because I am
going to be in heaven in a short time and then I'll understand
perfectly." But the astonishing part of it was that he had forgotten
more than we had ever hoped to know. And here was a man who, at
seventy, said, "I think I'm beginning to understand the Scriptures a
little bit." That is because of their depth. You can read them a
hundred times and they are always new. That is part of their miracle.
Their miracle is that there is not another book like it because when
you believe the word of the Scriptures, when you believe what the
Scriptures say, then you believe Christ.
I read, not so long ago, the autobiography of Lee
Iacocca, the president of the Chrysler Corporation. I read what Iacocca
said about himself. After I read that book I knew what Iacocca said
about himself. But if you asked me, "Do you know Iacocca now?" my
answer would have been, "No, I don't know him." No book can give me the
knowledge of a person. It can give me some knowledge about a person,
but never the personal knowledge of acquaintance. The Scriptures can
and do give us such personal knowledge when we believe them. The
Scriptures, in believing them, bring us to Christ Himself. We stand
before His face. They are not a biography or even an autobiography.
They are the powerful book that they are because in believing them we
lay hold on Christ! And in laying hold on Christ we lay hold on God.
That is a miracle.
Faith Alone Believes the Scriptures
The Scriptures are a book which, believing them,
give us Christ Himself. This means that the Scriptures must be received
by faith as the Word of God. There is a lot of misunderstanding on this
point. We do not prove that the Scriptures are the Word of God.
Practically every commentator and practically every book on
Introduction to the New Testament feel compelled to prove that the
Scriptures are the Word of God and feel compelled to prove that what
the Scriptures say is true. Let me quote: "Contrary to the fear of many
historians' openness to the possibility of the supernatural does not
entail the acceptance of every claim that a supernatural event had
occurred. Every such claim must be evaluated case by case with
attention to such things as the nature of the event and especially the
evidence backing up the claim. In the latter the extent and character
of the witness to the event are especially important. The Bible is open
to historical research and investigation and the historical accuracy of
the record must be decided on rational and empirical grounds" (Idem.,
p. 87 - my emphasis, HH). In Galatians we read: "Paul, an apostle of
Jesus Christ." Well, did Paul write that epistle or did h not? You say,
"Well, it says so." Yes, but I do not know. We have to prove it. And so
writers spend a hundred pages of extraordinarily learned investigation
proving that, after all, Paul wrote Galatians. My three?year old child
or grandchild whom I take on my knee when I read Galatians says, "Why
of course Paul wrote that. It says so right there, Grandpa." But that
is not enough, it is said. You have to prove it.
And so the Bible becomes the object of rational and
empirical proof. We cannot accept anything without proving it. We may
not do that. We may not attempt to prove the Bible as the Word of God.
When someone comes to me and says to me, "Prove that the Bible is the
Word of God," I say, "Well, the Bible says so! Read II Timothy 3:16.
Read II Peter 1:21. It says so." He says, "Yes, but how can I be sure
that it is true what the Bible says?" I say to him, "Man, if you don't
believe what the Bible says, then I'm sorry, but I can't help you." The
point is, that the kind of proof which the rationalist and empiricist
want is the kind of proof which the believer does not need; and which,
if it could be given, would not convert or persuade a single soul.
Those who will not accept the Bible as the Word of God will not be
persuaded if Gabriel himself came from heaven and said it was, or if
the voice of God from on high said, "The Bible is My Word." The
scholars who would scurry from their classrooms would say, as the Jews
did when the voice of God came from heaven to Jesus, "It thundered."
There is no proof you can muster that will convince the unbeliever, for
faith is the gift of God.
But the child of God who comes to the Scriptures by
faith, which is the only way to come, does not need that kind of proof.
Let me give you an illustration.
Supposing you had come to Adam in Paradise, when he
stood in the midst of God's world and when heaven and earth and every
creature sang loud doxologies of praise to God, and you had tapped Adam
on the shoulder and said, "Adam, prove to me that God made the world."
Adam would have said, "Are you out of your mind? If you can't hear the
Word of God in the singing of the birds and if you can't see the word
of God in the flowers, I don't know what kind of proof I can muster
that will possibly persuade you, when the whole world is full of the
Word of God and all of it shouts of God its Maker. If you can't hear
that, I can't find any proof to convince you."
Supposing I am in Germany and my wife is in Grand
Rapids and she writes me a letter. I eagerly tear open that letter to
read it. Supposing someone comes to me and says, "How do you know your
wife wrote this letter?" I say, "Well, look. Her signature is here." He
says, "Yes, but how can you be sure? Maybe someone forged her
signature. After all, it's typed. Maybe someone sat down at a
typewriter and then typed her name." I will say to him, "Well, I know
this is her letter. This is the way she talks. This is the way she
writes. These are the things she would talk about. These are the things
I want to hear. And if that isn't proof to you, well, I'm sorry. Let me
alone because I want to read the letter."
That is the way it is with the Bible. When someone
comes to me and says "Prove to me that the Bible is written by God,"
then I say, "Well, it says so. His signature is on every page!" And if
he says, "Well, I don't see it," then I say, "I'm sorry. I don't know
what proof I need to convince you. But I know it is! This is my
Bridegroom writing to me in all my sorrow." And he says, "How do you
know that?" And I say, "I know Him. This is the way He would write.
These are the things about which He would speak."
That is what faith is, is it not? Faith is not a
leap in the dark. Faith is not the acceptance of something which no one
can prove, a kind of blind acceptance of the unprovable. Faith is the
bond that puts one in fellowship with Christ. Faith causes us to know
Him as our Christ. And then when His letter comes to us, we say, "This
is what He would say. This is what I want to hear. I know that He wrote
it. I'm married to Him. He is my Bridegroom. And if you don't believe
that, I'm sorry. The letter is not for you anyway. Please leave me
alone. I want to read my letter."
I know, I know with a certainty, I know beyond all
proof that He whom I love, to whom I belong, and with whom someday I
shall dwell, is the Savior who wrote to me in this sorrowful life this
glad and marvelously wonderful letter without which I cannot get from
here to glory.
That is faith.
And that is the only way to come to the Word of
God. If you do not come that way, the Scriptures are not going to speak
to you. Luther said that four hundred and fifty years ago. You come as
a little child. You come humbly. You do not need to read the rabbis.
You do not need to know the latest in archaeological findings. You do
not need to know the Greek and the Hebrew. You do not need to be
learned in Talmudic lore. All you need is the spirit of a little child,
the spirit of Samuel who said, "Speak, Lord, for thy servant heareth."
Then the Scriptures will speak to you. It does not make any difference
whether you are a little child or whether you are an old man. They will
speak to you. They will speak to you of things great and marvelous
because they will speak to you of that which is your salvation.
There were saints in the past who went to the stake for this Bible, who
hung from gallows for this Bible, who were drowned or roasted over open
fires because they wanted this Bible. Nothing like that is required of
us, not yet. Someday it might be, but not yet. Are we going to let them
take it away from us?
It is not hard to answer them. It is not hard to
put all their so?called learning to flight. I believe that the Bible is
the Word of God and that what it says is true. And I believe it because
Jesus Himself says so in Scripture.
That Bible I am going to take with me because this
way that you and I have to walk is a very difficult way, a way of
suffering, of shame, of disappointment, of grief, of pain, of
persecution; a way that is impossible to walk, that really we cannot
walk except we take this Word with us. And wherever we take this Word,
whether we take it along with us to the hospital or to the cemetery to
bury our loved ones; whether we take it in our hearts to prison and the
gallows, that Word is enough - always marvelously, wonderfully enough
for all our needs, because it brings to us Christ.
May God give us grace to fight in defense of that
truth.
Pamphlets Published By
Peace Protestant Reformed Church
Knowing The True
God, by Rev. Steven Houck - A brief, simple explanation of
the gospel for the unconverted or new believer.
Jehovah-The Savior,
by Rev. Steven Houck - An explanation of Who the Savior is and what it
means to be saved as expressed in Isaiah 43:3a.
The Battle For
The Bible, by Prof. Herman Hanko - A Biblical and Reformed
explanation of the inspiration and interpretation of Scripture.
The King James
Version of the Bible, by Rev. Steven Houck - A history and
defense of the King James Version of the Bible.
The Bondage Of
The Will, by Rev. Steven Houck - A detailed explanation of
the relationship of God's will and man's will in salvation.
The Christ of
Arminianism, by Rev. Steven Houck - A concise comparison
of the christ of Arminianism and the Christ of the Bible.
God's Sovereign
Elective Grace, by Rev. George Ophoff - An explanation and
defense of the Biblical doctrine of election.
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