1. The Bible claims it's true
Although this in itself does not prove that
the Bible is true, we could immediately doubt the truth of the Bible if it never made this
claim. The fact is that the Bible claims that it is written by God and thus keeps open the
possibility that it is true:
All
Scripture is God-breathed and is useful for teaching, rebuking, correcting and training in
righteousness. (2 Tim. 3:16)
Above all, you must understand that no
prophecy of Scripture came about by the prophet's own interpretation. For prophecy never
had its origin in the will of man, but men spoke from God as they were carried along by
the Holy Spirit. (2 Peter 1:20-21)
2. Jesus claims it's true
Even if you think Jesus is just a great
teacher, that fact that a great teacher makes such a claim about the Bible must count as
evidence for the Bible's truth. Jesus claimed that "Scripture cannot be broken"
(John 10:35), "until heaven and earth disappear, not the smallest letter, not the
least stroke of a pen, will by any means disappear from the Law until everything is
accomplished" (Matthew 5:18), and "O foolish men, and slow of heart to believe
all that the prophets have spoken..." (Luke 24:25-27). Jesus also used the Bible as a
weapon against Satan in Matthew chap. 4. And He kept appealing to the Bible as if it had
authority, by saying "it is written" seventy times.
3. The Bible is a morally and ethically superior piece of
literature
My college English professor (a non-Christian)
at the University of California, Berkeley, encouraged us to read the book of Ecclesiastes,
claiming that it was a remarkable piece of literature. The Bible's superiority has often
been acknowledged even by unbelievers and is denied by few who have actually read and
studied its pages.
4. The Bible has the power to affect us
When some people read the Bible, they claim to
"meet God." In the 1500's, one man, Martin Luther, the great father of
Protestant churches said, "My conscience has been taken captive by the Word of
God." I too have been "taken captive" by the Bible. I didn't fully believe
that the Bible was true until one evening, when I was 19, I started reading the Bible,
beginning in the books of John and Matthew. Beginning with the first evening, the Bible so
captivated me that I couldn't put it down. I started to read it ten minutes a day, then
15, then 20, then 30 minutes a day. I was so moved by what I read that I committed my life
to Jesus Christ.
5. The Bible has extraordinary unity
The Bible is composed of 66 parts, or books,
written over a period of approximately 1,500 years (from about 1450 BC to about 90 AD) by
over 40 different people. These writers were all different from each other. Some were
rich, some poor, some young, some old. Some were priests, some prophets, one was a tax
collector (Matthew), one was a doctor (Luke), a tentmaker (Paul), and a fisherman (Peter).
Yet they all wrote about the same man who claimed to be God - Jesus Christ. On the
surface, there might seem to be disagreement between the writers, but if you study deeper,
you will find that they all agree about Jesus Christ, God, the Holy Spirit, the Bible, the
end times, salvation, heaven, hell, etc.
Not all collections of religious writings can
claim this feature. The Koran was entirely written through the revelations of one man,
Mohummad. The Book of Mormon was entirely written through one man, Joseph Smith.
6. The Bible is historically accurate
Luke, a Bible writer, is one example. His
details about Roman officials such as "Sergio Paulus of Cyprus," "Gallio,
the proconsul of Achaia," "Herod the Great," "Pontius Pilate,"
and "King Agrippa,"are all confirmed by ancient Roman historical records and
archeology. Even unbelieving scholars agree that King David, King Solomon, the
Philistines, and countless other persons mentioned in the Bible were real people, and that
such cities as Ephesus, Philippi, and Thessalonica were real places. The ancient Ebla
Tablets, a collection of 17,000 tablets discovered since 1968 and written around 2,500
B.C. mention the biblical cities of Sodom, Gomorrah, Admah, Zeboiim, and Zoar, found in
Genesis 14. The Mari Tablets, 25,000 tablets written in 1,900 B.C., mention the names of
Abraham, Jacob, Nahor, Dan, Levi, Benjamin, and Ishmael, found in the book of Genesis.
Also a Canaanite bronze calf was discovered a couple of years ago and reported in Time
magazine, confirming the Bible's account that pagan nations worshipped calves.
7. Bible prophecies are fulfilled
Jesus Christ, for example, fulfilled numerous
prophecies. Read Isaiah 53 (the entire chapter), Micah 5:2, Daniel 9:25-27, and Jeremiah
23:5-6, and Psalm 16:8-11. In these few Old Testament prophecies, made several hundred
years before Christ, we are told the exact time of Jesus' coming, the exact place of His
birth, the family of which He would be born, the condition of His family at the time of
His birth, how He would be received by people, the method and details of His death, how He
would be buried, and His resurrection. These predictions were all fulfilled with great
precision in Jesus Christ.
8. The Bible has been extraordinarily preserved
The Bible is very old. Its oldest book is
almost 3,500 years old. Yet, somehow, more than any other ancient writing, the Bible
doesn't seem to change over time, even over thousands of years. For example, ancient
scrolls of parts of the Bible (e.g. book of Isaiah, Psalms) written around 100 B.C. were
found in the 1940's near the Dead Sea in the Middle East. When compared to the next most
ancient biblical scrolls, the Masoretic Texts, written around 900 A.D., there are
virtually no significant differences!
As for the New Testament, there are about
25,000 ancient manuscripts (i.e. copies), dating as early as 120 A.D., or in other words,
just 30 years after the last book of the New Testament was written. Compare this to
Homer's Iliad, of classical Greek literature (which you might have studied in
junior high), of which there are only 643 ancient manuscripts, dating only as early as 500
years after its writing. There are only 193 manuscripts of the works of Sophocles, 49 of
Aristotle, and only 7 of Plato's Tetralogies, dating as much as early as 1,200
years after its writing. In short, the Bible is perhaps the most well-preserved book in
the world.
9. The Bible writers endured great persecution for what they
saw
They were eyewitnesses to Jesus' resurrection
or His existence and held to their story even under great persecution. If the events in
the Bible were false, no writer in his right mind would endure such torture for a lie.
Matthew was slain with a sword in Ethiopia. Mark died by being dragged through the streets
of Alexandria. Luke was hanged on an olive tree. John was banished to prison in Patmos.
Peter was crucified upside down. Jude was shot to death with arrows. Paul was beheaded at
Rome by Emperor Nero.
10. The Bible changes lives
Prostitutes have been reformed. Drunkards have
become sober. The prideful become humble. The weak become strong, when they read the
Bible. I, too, have been transformed. After I started reading the Bible, and believed in
what it said about Jesus Christ, an 18 year old girl said to me, "Randy, you're
really different. You've changed." Even my 17 year old sister said to me,
"Randy, how come you don't fight with me, or do the mean things you used to do
anymore?" And in my own church, there are hundreds of testimonies of drug addicts who
came clean, violent men who became gentle, alcoholics who became dry, atheists who became
believers, troubled marriages that became happy ones, because they read the Bible and what
it said about Jesus Christ.
Pastor Randal K. Young