“All Scripture is inspired of God and
beneficial for teaching, for reproving, for setting things straight, for
disciplining in righteousness, that the man of God may be fully competent,
completely equipped for every good work.”—2 TIMOTHY 3:16, 17.
WHAT a powerful expression by the
apostle Paul on the excelling value of the Bible! He was, of course, referring
specifically to that part of the Bible available to him at the time—the
writings that people sometimes refer to as the Old Testament. But in principle
his words apply with equal force to all of the Bible’s 66 books, including
those written by Jesus’ faithful disciples in the first century C.E.
Do you esteem the Bible as highly as
Paul did? Do you think that the writers of the Bible really were inspired by
God? First-century Christians did. That belief never wavered during the ensuing
centuries. Fourteenth-century English cleric John Wycliffe, for example, viewed
the Bible as “the infallible rule of truth.” The New Bible Dictionary, commenting
on Paul’s words quoted above, states that divine “inspiration, therefore,
guarantees the truth of all that the Bible asserts.”
Changing
Attitudes Toward the Bible
In recent times, however, confidence in the authority of the Bible has
waned. “In theory,” says the handbook The World’s Religions, “all
Christians [still] accept the Bible as authoritative, both in guiding their
actions and in forming their beliefs.” In practice, however, that is
simply no longer true. Many people now view the Bible as no more than
“unreliable human tradition.” Though acknowledging that the Bible writers were
men of great spirituality, they see those writers as no more than fallible men
who struggled to explain deep spiritual truths but who lacked the knowledge and
enlightenment we have today.
In truth, very few people nowadays
really let the Bible guide their thoughts and actions. How often, for example,
do you hear people say that the Bible’s standards of morality are simply
old-fashioned and impractical? Many feel free to water down the Bible’s laws
and principles—or even to ignore them completely when it seems expedient to do
so. Some who call themselves Christians blatantly ignore what the Bible says
about fornication, adultery, dishonesty, and drunkenness.—1 Corinthians 6:9, 10.
Why is this so? Early in the
20th century, one reason was identified by archaeologist Sir Charles
Marston in his book The Bible Is True. People, he said, were too quick
to “accept without a murmur many of the speculations of modern writers” who
attacked the integrity of the Bible. Could that still be true today? How should
you view the opinions and theories of scholars who undermine confidence in the
Bible? See what the next article has to say about this.
LEARN MORE AT www.jw.org
No comments:
Post a Comment