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Statistics
of the Bible's Power
Amazingly
Consistent Theme of the Bible
The
Bible contains 66 books, written by approximately 40 different
writers, over 1600 years, on 3 different continents, in 3 different
languages, on thousands of different subjects, yet with one central
themeGod's redemption of mankind from sin won for the whole
world by the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ.
Logical Consistency of the Bible
For
a successful debate, show that your opponent's views are arbitrary
or inconsistent, and that your position is consistent
and not arbitrary. The Bible is internally consistent ("self
consistent" or "logically consistent"). Some debating points:
- Life
after death in heaven or hell may be, in one sense, difficult
to believe, but it is entirely internally consistent
with the rest of the Bible. If there is a truly just God, justice
is only certain if there is ultimate justice. The non-biblical
view, in contrast, is inconsistent when it holds that
we came from nowhere and go to nowhere, but life is filled with
meaning in between. Thus only the biblical worldview is internally
consistent.
- The
statement that "there are no moral absolutes" contains two mistakes:
- The
declaration itself is an absolute statement, thus it contradicts
itself.
- A
person cannot live his life without moral absolutes. Examples:
fairness vs. unfairness; kindness vs. hatred.
- For
another example, the doctrine of original sin is consistent
with the need for a savior.
- If
there is an omnipotent God, the miracle of creation, as well
as the other biblical miracles, is very plausible.
A logical thought progression to make sense of the Christian
faith:
- Is there
a God? If so,
- Is it
logical to believe that God knows what is going on down
here? If so,
- Is it
reasonable to believe that He cares about what is going
on down here? If so,
- Is it
reasonable to believe that He cares enough to communicate
His concerns to us? If so,
- How
might He communicate truth to us? Can the Bible demonstrate
that it is indeed God's Word?
Geisler lists these criteria for establishing if a book
was from God:
- It would
claim to be God's Word.
- It would
be historically accurate when it speaks on historical matters.
- The authors
would be trustworthy.
- The book
would be thematically unified and without contradictions.
- We would
have received accurate copies of the original manuscripts.
- It would
make statements that would reveal knowledge about the way things
work beyond the knowledge of its day. (See Geisler Encyclopedia
pages 692-693.)
- It would
make predictions about the future that could not be known through
natural means.
- The message
would be unique.
- The messengers
would be confirmed by miracles.
- The words
would have a transforming power.
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