Posted on 09/01/2019 3:49:32 PM PDT by Tolerance Sucks Rocks
Question One: How do we know the Bible is true? (Hebrews 4:12)
According to the Bible, all Scripture is God-breathed (2 Timothy 3:16). Peter confirmed this when he said that those who wrote the Bible were not speaking on their own but spoke from God as they were carried along by the Holy Spirit (2 Peter 1:21). Many parts of Scripture are directly attributed to God through use of phrases like This is what the Lord says (e.g., Exodus 4:22). Finally, Jesus often quoted from the Old Testament and affirmed it as being Gods Word.
Prophecies that were later fulfilled are corroboration of the accuracy of the Bibles claim to be Gods Word. For example, the vision recorded in Daniel 7 correctly predicted the rise of the Medo-Persian Empire, the Greek Empire under Alexander the Great, and the Roman Empire.
Archaeological discoveries are also important evidence of the Bibles accuracy. For example, for many years King David was believed by some to be a fictional character. But recently a composition from a king of Syria referring to the house of David was discovered at Tel Dan. This writing provides tangible evidence that ancient rulers indeed recognized the dynasty of David in Judah.
(Excerpt) Read more at biblegateway.com ...
God reveals his power in two ways:
1) Miracles which reveal the power of God.
2) Prophecies which reveal the foreknowledge of God.
Reasons we know scripture is true:
1) The message itself. To Love God with all your heart and to love your neighbor as yourself and to even love your enemies is a higher calling than other religions that will tell you do no harm. The bible calls us to an active love.
2) The message itself. Most religions consider their God or gods to be holy and pure. But the Bible tells us to "Be Holy for I am holy" and "Be Perfect for I am Perfect". The BIble tells us that God is going to judge us by his own standard which is holy perfection.
Individually, God reveals himself to us when we
There would need to be provable falsehoods.
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>> “Daniel was written after Alexander was dead.” <<
An incredibly foolish lie!
Much of Daniel was written while Nebuchadnessar was still alive, and all of it before Alexander was born.
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NASB is what I read. Most literal translation of the Hebrew, Aramaic, and Greek texts for a modern translation.
In the past I have read the NRSV (dislike) and NIV. Much prefer the NASB
“Daniel, the author, “
Circular logic.
So far it’s all been proven to be true and accurate.
At least according to the Jews, Daniel was written during the 2nd century BC during the reign of Antiochus IV Epiphanes. This was the time of the Maccabees. Well after Alexander.
The Dead Sea Scrolls was an amazing find which indicated the fidelity most scribes had in transcribing the texts. While some errors were found, practically 98% of the DSS matches exactly what has survived into our Bibles today. If these were not from God, how could any religious text endure thousands of years without major revisions?
It takes an act of faith to believe the entire bible is the literal word of God... There is much of it that sounds too far fetched to be true, like Noah’s ark and the flood covering the whole earth... or Jonah and the whale. I think it stems from us trying to put the greatness of God into simple human understanding and being limited to humans words and especially after the languages were confused. The example I got was that the Hebrew language used I think 5 or 6 different words that would all be translated in English to the same word, Love.
I had a really hard time trying to figure out what the King James version was saying, much less what it meant. I was taught the bible had all the answers man had on how we should live our lives... but I did not know what it was saying. I really did not even pick one up, most of my adult life... and especially after the internet when I could just search for, what does the bible say about “X”
(which is still a good tool, many times you get multiple good verses back to read...)
Last year I found Amir Tsarfati and he kept talking about Ezekiel’s war brewing, so instead of reading the King James version I found an online NIV version and read Ezekiel... I understood what he was saying, so then I decided it was time to read the whole bible.
I got an Interlinear NIV Hebrew-English Old Testament because I wanted to see the original text translated as it was written, But the NIV is just written in plain English that you don’t need to try to figure out what it is saying...
I found it interesting listening to somebody reading the King James while following along in my NIV and where they read something different, they come back and clarify with exactly what my Bible says in the first place.
The other issue with the King James is that King James ordered certain passages changed to fit his thinking.
For example, the Hebrew Bible says “You will not murder”, the King James says “Thou shall not kill”. Big difference. But King Jame wanted it to say “kill” so the translators made it say that.
And why couldn't God literally use allegory, metaphor and descriptions suitable for comprehension by a primitive people?
I use NLT, but it’s basically plain, modern English, also.
A friend of mine calls the NIV the “Nearly Inspired Version.”
I call it the redacted Bible, because it is missing so many verses in the NT.
The translators used a different Greek manuscript than some of the older English translations.
The earlier comment about using a King James and ignoring the italicized words is spot-on. That yields an almost perfect translation from the original languages, albeit with awkward syntax.
Given the rather serious and continuous missteps of the clergy and the organization that protects them, this is a very important question.
Not a good argument.
“Daniel was written after Alexander was dead.”
Jesus spoke of the reliability of the Book of Daniel see Matthew 24:15
But it is. Lots of liberals try to prove it wrong.
It is amazing to see so many archeology sites pop up exactly where the Bible said they’d be. ‘Tis a warm and happy feeling.
Our pastor did a series of sermons on the Ten Commandments. It isn’t so much more than “Don’t Do this or else.” He spoke about how God created the world. There are certain rules on how to operate in the world. The Ten Commandments are the instruction manual on how to live in this world that is meant to function in a certain way.
When I see the results of following the Ten Commandments or not (in my own life or in the news) I think that is proof right there. Both that God is the Creator, and that He inspired the Bible, which is the entire operating manual.
Hmm. Maybe the Ten Commandments are like the most important things highlighted at the beginning of the manual, or printed on the label of the actual item.
1) Always place ladder on level ground.
2) .....
Yep - great when other folks say those sites didn’t exist.
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