The Holy Bible is the
infallible and inerrant word of God, God's message to mankind. Those who do not
believe this are challenged to study for themselves and examine the evidence
honestly and objectively to see that the Bible is accurate and reliable.
Bible-believers should not be afraid to examine the evidence or worry that this
will weaken their faith. Examining the evidence will strengthen your faith.
(Especially Biblical Creationism and the evidence of the Noachian Deluge.)
This is what we are told
to believe instead of the Genesis account of creation: Hydrogen was produced
when nothing exploded, then heavier elements were formed when the explosion of
hydrogen stars caused hydrogen atoms to jam together, and from these elements
stars and galaxies were formed and the whole universe became intricate and
ordered by accident. Some exploding stars left a swirling disk of cosmic dust
which formed our Solar System with the matter in the center just happening to
achieve enough mass to produce nuclear fusion (the Sun) and Earth just
happening to be in just the right place for the sustainment of life. Eventually
a molten blob (Earth) cooled enough to form water and a chance combination or
mixture of chemicals produced a living cell and a series of extremely fortunate
events just happened to occur in the right sequence to change that first
one-celled organism into modern man and modern animals and plants in defiance
of science. In other words: Nothing became hydrogen and hydrogen became people
over eons of time.
How well does the theory
of evolution harmonize with genuine science? Consider: If Creationism is merely
religion and not science because it involves faith, and the Theory of Evolution
is genuine science, then what is the hard evidence supporting Evolution that
does not have to be accepted by faith? What hard evidence is there that an
uncontrolled explosion can produce something as intricate and ordered as the
universe? What hard evidence is there that a chance combination or mixture of
chemicals can produce a living organism? What is the hard evidence that a
series of thousands of extremely fortunate events just happened to occur in the
right sequence to change a one-celled organism into modern man and modern
animals and plants? What is the hard evidence that any rock, geological
stratum, or fossil is millions of years old? How can a mutation result in a
change from one species into another since mutations take away from a genetic
code but never add to it? How do you reconcile the theory of evolution with the
DNA Code Barrier, Gene Depletion, Natural Selection, and Thermodynamics? Why
does the theory of evolution lose credibility in the absence of logic
fallacies? Basic science relies on observation, fact, hypothesis, theory, and
law. Observation means describing or measuring what is observed, a fact is
based on repeated observations that can be confirmed, a hypothesis is a
statement that can be tested so the conclusions or inferences can be explained,
a theory is a general explanation into which facts and experimental conclusions
can be incorporated, and a Law is a functional generalization that has stood
the test of time and is reliable. The theory of evolution relies on these presuppositions:
A gradual change over unimaginable eons (many different and often conflicting
explanations are offered to explain how), the organizing force for life is
internal and dependent of random chance, and time, chance and natural processes
are responsible for material reality without intelligent design. The theory of
evolution does not meet the requirements of basic science or withstand
application of the scientific method that is accepted by evolutionists and used
by evolutionists to denounce opposing views (e.g., creationism) as non-science.
Atheism originates in the
heart, the emotions, and not in the mind or intellect. (Psalm 14:1; 53:1)
Why do the earth and the
universe look so old? God created everything with the appearance of age. For
example, when He created man He made a full-grown man and not a baby, when He
created fish and fowl He made grown birds and fish and not eggs, etc.….
(Genesis 1)
How could light be
produced on the first day if the sun, moon, and stars were not created till the
fourth day? We should consider that God is infinite and omnipotent and does not
need the sun and stars to provide light. (Consider I John 1:5 & Revelation
22:5) Consider also that verse two and subsequent verses do not indicate or
determine whether light had already existed elsewhere or if God removed or
changed a condition that prevented light from reaching the globe or regions of
the globe. (E.g., dust cloud, rarefraction of gases in the upper atmosphere,
change of the polar axis, etc.)
Why is the Genesis account
of creation so important? It is not possible to understand Jesus Christ and New
Testament teachings without the Old Testament. (John 5:39; II Timothy 3:16) The
Bible does not separate the knowledge of God the Redeemer from God the Creator,
and the Genesis account shows the depravity of man, the effects of sin, and
man's need for atonement. (Consider Romans 5:17-19; I Corinthians 15:45)
To disprove or discredit
the Bible, many insist that man has been on the earth longer than six thousand
years, but this does not disprove anything. Theories of modern Bible-believers
about the time of Adam's creation or the time of the world-wide Deluge could be
off by hundreds or thousands of years due to the difference in the way ancient
historians recorded genealogies. Ancient Hebrews often listed the most
important son or the legal heir first, not necessarily the eldest son. For
example, Genesis 11:26 says "And Terah lived seventy years, and begat
Abram, Nahor, and Haran," but a comparison of Scripture passages reveals
that Terah was at 130 years old when Abram was born. (Genesis 11:32; 12:1-4;
Acts 7:4) Apparently Genesis 11:26 means that Terah was 70 years old when he
begot his sons, of whom Abram was the legal heir or the most important. Modern
writers like to include every name in a genealogy, but ancient writers just
included the important names and often skipped several generations at a time.
For example, Genesis 11:12 says "And Arphaxad lived five and thirty years,
and begat Salah" even though Arphaxad was the grandfather of Salah. (Luke
3:35-36) In listing his own genealogy Ezra gives the names of only sixteen
generations between himself and Aaron even though his list covers about a
thousand years. Ezra evidently just listed the officially reckonable names.
(Ezra 7:1-5) Matthew 1:8 says "Joram begat Ozias," but according to
the Old Testament Joram was the great-great-grandfather of Ozias (Uzziah). Matthew
evidently means the officially reckonable generations when he speaks of
generations. (Matthew 1:17) The original writers and the first readers
understood why certain names were included and others were omitted, but we come
to wrong conclusions when we assume that Bible writers recorded genealogies
like western or modern historians and then interpret their writings
accordingly.
Do dinosaur fossils
discredit the Genesis account? No. Note that there is no hard evidence that any
fossil, rock, or stratum is millions of years old. Scientists have been able to
examine the DNA of dinosaur bones and dinosaur bones with rotten flesh have
been discovered, which would indicate that the bones are hundreds or thousands
and not millions of years old. What happened to dinosaurs? Post-Deluge climatic
changes, diseases, insufficient food, and activities of man caused many animals
to die out.
Is the Bible
scientifically accurate? Certainly, the Bible contradicts numerous theories and
opinions held by many scientists, but this does not disprove the Bible, it
merely proves that scientists are human after all. When a scientist says that
the Genesis account of creation is wrong or that the miracles of the Bible
could not happen he is not stating a scientific fact, he is expressing an
opinion. Studying and comparing the theory of evolution and the Genesis account
of creation reveals that it takes far more faith (or credulity) to believe the
theory of evolution than it takes to believe the Genesis account of creation or
the miracles of the Bible. Not only is the Bible in harmony with true science,
the Bible is scientifically accurate on matters that scientists discovered only
later. (Genesis 1:11,21,5; 9:4; Leviticus 11:6; 17:11; Job 19:20; 26:7; 28:2;
36:27-28; Ecclesiastes 1:7; 11:2; Isaiah 40:22; I Corinthians 15:39)
Consider the Mosaic Law.
Moses said the Law came from God. (Deuteronomy 4:7-8, 12, 14) If he had said
that the Law came from his own mind that would have really been outrageous. How
could his mind have managed to produce the Law? Look at his background. The Law
contradicted Egyptian science, medicine, philosophy, and religion. How could
Moses have anticipated the discoveries of modern science, medicine, hygiene,
conservation, sociology, and economics?
Is the Bible historically
accurate? The Bible is filled with references to specific people, places, and
events which have been confirmed by secular history and archaeology, and
archaeologists continue uncovering more evidence to verify the Bible record.
For example, for centuries skeptics pointed to Bible references to the Hittites
as evidence of inaccuracy because no evidence of such a people had been
discovered, and then in 1906 the Hittite capital was discovered.
We still observe evidence
of the Noachian Deluge in mankind's collective memory. A cataclysm like the
Noachian Deluge would never be forgotten by the survivors, who would tell their
children and their children's children all about the experience. (Genesis
8:15-17) As people scattered abroad it was only natural that stories of the
Flood would pass from generation to generation. (Genesis 11:9) The fact that
there are stories about an earth wide global destruction of life by water, with
a place of refuge for a few survivors, and a seed of mankind preserved, in the
traditions and folklore of ancient or primitive peoples the world over is
strong proof that those people had a common origin and that their ancestors
shared the Flood experience in common. The Flood occurred on the seventeenth
day of the second month (Heshvan), which corresponds to November 1. (Genesis
7:11) Various primitive peoples preserved a remnant of traditions about the
Flood by observing a 'feast of the ancestors' at this time of year. The Hindus
celebrate this festival on the seventeenth day of November, and the Egyptians
on the seventeenth day of Athyr (the day they say the Flood began). The Celtic
year ended October 31 and November 1 was the Celtic New Year, and the Celtics
celebrated the Eve of Samhain, the Celtic Lord of the dead, the evening of
October 31, and this is the origin of Halloween in America.
Incidentally, movies and
cartoons about Noah’s Ark often depict adult animals in the ark, which is unrealistic.
If they were adult animals there would not have been enough room for all of
them, but there would have been room for baby animals, and being in darkness
would have slowed their growth and kept most of them in hibernation most of the
time. (Further research is encouraged.)
The unity and consistency
of the Bible is evidence of divine inspiration, which is why skeptics are quick
to point out so-called contradictions. Does the Bible contradict itself? It is
inevitable that the Word of God will contradict the theories and sentiments of
men, and it is easy for man to assume that something is wrong with the Bible
because of what is wrong with man. (Psalm 33:10-11; Proverbs 19:21; Isaiah 55:8-9;
Romans 8:7; I Corinthians 3:19; Galatians 5:17) But the Bible does not
contradict itself.
Most so-called
contradictions are cleared up through further study of the Bible, such as the
supposed contradiction between the promise to destroy Israel and the promise to
preserve Israel. (Leviticus 26:44; Deuteronomy 28:20) The prophet Amos clears
up the misunderstanding: God would destroy the kingdom of Israel and preserve
the people of Israel. (Amos 9:8) When the Assyrians conquered the ten-tribe
kingdom of Israel they carried its people into captivity and they were never
heard from again, and so the ten-tribe kingdom is often called the lost ten
tribes. But were the people of Israel lost? After the ten tribes broke away to
form the northern kingdom of Israel they lived in idolatry and never had even
one godly king. King Baasha fortified the border because the God-fearing people
in the northern kingdom wanted to immigrate to the Kingdom of Judah that had
the Temple in Jerusalem to preserve true worship. (I Kings 15:17) Over time the
God-fearing people in the north migrated to the southern kingdom so that only
the dregs of the ten-tribe kingdom of Israel were lost. (II Chronicles 15:9;
19:4; 34:9)
Where did Cain get his
wife? When Cain went to the land of Nod did he find humans that were not
descended from Adam as some speculate? The Bible gives no indication that
anyone already dwelt in the land of Nod or that it was called the land of Nod
before Cain went there. (Genesis 4:16) Adam had both sons and daughters.
(Genesis 5:4) If Cain married his sister would this mean that God condoned sin
as some argue? Marriage to a close relative, such as a sister, disrupts the
moral and social order of the family as ordained by God but this would not have
been a problem for the first generations of mankind. After the first
generations it would have been possible to marry a cousin, and marriage between
cousins (even first cousins) is not immoral or dangerous.
Numbers used in Scripture
often present problems, causing thinking people to look at a text of Scripture
and note that the numbers given appear to be unrealistic or contradictory. It
must be noted that the ancients often used round numbers in an approximate
sense. We still do that to an extent, such as when someone says he just had a
two-week vacation or holiday when in fact he had been gone thirteen, fifteen,
or sixteen days. For example, in certain contexts dealing with local
government, "ten," "fifty," "hundred," and
"thousand" were administrative units and not exact numbers, and in
the Jewish army a regiment was called a thousand. The English rendering of a
word may not always be the only possible rendering, and a closer study of the
context and setting is often needed. In English we have many words with
multiple definitions which depend on the context in which a word is used, and
this was also true of ancient Hebrew and Greek. For example, the Hebrew word
for "thousand" (eleph) also means "family" and is
translated as "family" in Judges 6:15; the number of Israelites who
crossed the Red Sea, and the size of the army of Israel, was possibly much less
than what is often assumed.
Some apparent
contradictions are due to misunderstandings of idioms. (E.g., Deuteronomy 5:3;
Hosea 6:6; Matthew 9:13; 12:7) Foreigners always have trouble with idioms, and
we are the foreigners where the Bible is concerned.
Many apparent
contradictions are just a matter of different points of view. Different writers
portraying the same things can be expected to describe them differently. Police
compare the different accounts of the same event to find similarities as well
as discrepancies, because if different witnesses to the same event describe or
word everything exactly alike this is a good indication that they conspired
together to lie.
Was Ahaziah twenty-two or
forty-two when he began to reign? (2 Kings 8:26; 2 Chronicles 22:2) Ahaziah was
made king while his father was alive and was confirmed king after his father's
death when he was forty-two.
How old was Jehoiachin
when he began to reign? (2 Kings 24:8; 2 Chronicles 36:9) Jehoiachin became a
king with his father when he was eight, but he did not take complete control
until he was eighteen.
Did Christ use the term
kingdom of God or kingdom of heaven? Mark, Luke, and John quote Christ as
saying kingdom of God while Matthew usually quotes Christ as saying kingdom of
heaven. Christ and His Disciples spoke Aramaic and the four Gospels are written
in Greek. The Book of Matthew was written in Hebrew and then translated into
Greek. The issue was not the exact words used but how to translate those words
from Aramaic into Greek, or from Aramaic into Hebrew and then into Greek.
When Christ rode into
Jerusalem did the Jews cry hosanna or glory? (Matthew 21:9; Luke 19:38) The
Jews probably used the Hebrew word hosanna. But Luke was writing for Greeks,
and "glory" is what hosanna meant from a Greek point of view.
When Christ met and
healed blind Bartimaeus and his unidentified companion was Christ leaving
Jericho or headed for Jericho? (Matthew 20:29-30; Mark 10:46; Luke 18:35) At
that time Jericho was a double city, and the old Jewish city of Jericho was
about a mile from the Roman city of Jericho. Apparently, Matthew and Mark refer
to the Jewish city of Jericho while Luke refers to the Roman city of Jericho.
What about the difference
in wording of parables that appear in several Gospels? (e.g., the parable of
The Sower) Obviously, Christ would have used the same parables on different
occasions and worded them differently each time.
Why do the Gospel writers
appear to disagree on the wording of the superscription of accusation nailed to
the cross of Christ by Pontius Pilate? (Matthew 27:37; Mark 15:26; Luke 23:38;
John 19:19) The superscription was written in three languages, and apparently
one writer is giving an exact quote of the Greek inscription while the others
are giving translations of the Hebrew inscription or the Latin inscription or
possibly a mixture of the two. (John 19:20)
What about the apparent
contradictions in the New Testament quotations of the Old Testament? This
misunderstanding is due to differences between ancient and modern literary
customs. Today we use quotation marks to make a distinction between a direct
quotation and an indirect quotation, and we use a row of dots to signify that
words were removed to shorten a long quotation. But punctuation was not yet
invented when the New Testament was being written. In many cases the writers
combined quotation and exposition in one. This was following the literary
customs of their day, and their method did have the advantage of using fewer
words. First century Christians were accustomed to all this and were much more
familiar with Scripture than most modern Christians and needed less
explanation.
From beginning to end the
Bible claims to be the infallible word of God, and this claim is either true or
it is not. If this claim is not true then none of the Bible is reliable, there
is no basis for faith, and there is no foundation or support for Christianity.
If this claim is true, then Christians are obliged to accept the entire Bible
to be what it claims to be, and no compromise is logical or even possible.
We must always remember
that any knowledge that any of us has is incomplete and the Holy Bible is the
final authority. (I Corinthians 8:2; Psalm 33:4; 119:130; Proverbs 2:3-6;
3:5-7; Jeremiah 9:23-24; II Timothy 2:14-16; 3:16)
Why you can believe the Bible www.youtube.com/watch?v=G1XJ7DeR5fc
Creation Today www.creationtoday.org
Institute For Creation Research www.icr.org
Associates For Biblical Research www.biblearchaeology.org
Tornado in a junkyard : the relentless myth of
Darwinism, by James Perloff www.archive.org/details/tornadoinjunkyar00perl
Why is it important to believe in biblical inerrancy? www.gotquestions.org/Biblical-inerrancy.html
More Evidence that Dinosaurs and Man
Co-existed! www.angelfire.com/mi/dinosaurs/dinoscoexist.html
Isn’t the King James Bible Too Difficult to
Understand? www.wayoflife.org/database/isnt_the_king_james_bible_too_antiquated.html?fbclid=IwAR1KYMMCT6qw1LZMi1e8VC73Cn6opuO3R_7KnnQq0GV83myw25RRcbSk_x4
God Wrote Only One Bible God Wrote Only One Bible - Jasper James Ray : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive