THE REFORMED WITNESS HOUR"Scripture: Its Infallibility"Rev. Doug Kuiper(e-mail: Rev. Carl Haak) |
Dear
Radio Friends,
The child of God must know the
Scriptures to be infallible. Not only
inerrant. That is true too. Inerrant means there is no error in them. But also infallible (not capable of having error
in them). That they are infallible explains
why they are inerrant. There is no error, not
merely as a coincidence, but because Scripture is unable to have errors in it.
The reason why Scripture cannot
have errors in it is because it is the Word of God and God cannot lie. It is impossible for God to lie
(Heb. 6:18),
which God who cannot lie promised
(Tit. 1:2).
God is not a man that He should lie
(Num. 23:19).
Because
God is a God of light and of truth and of unchanging truth, so in Scripture there are no
lies, errors, or deceptions.
That the Scriptures are
infallible, however, does not merely follow from the truth of Gods unchangingness,
but is also expressly stated in Scripture itself. There
are a number of passages that imply or teach it to some degree, but the classic text regarding the infallibility of Scripture is
John 10:35.
There we read (and it is Jesus who is speaking):
The scripture cannot be broken.
Now, this is a parenthetical
statement of Jesus. It is mentioned in
connection with an argument that He is making to the Jews.
Therefore, we must study it in connection with the whole incident and the whole
argument. But there is a benefit in doing
that. For in the context and in light of the
argument, Jesus not only says that the Scripture cannot be broken (though clearly
He does that), but He also applies and illustrates the doctrine of the infallibility of
Scripture.
Let us examine the words of
Jesus, The Scripture cannot be broken.
The occasion for this assertion
was that the Jews were ready to stone Jesus, charging Him with blasphemy. The Jews took up stones again to stone him, we read in
John 10:31.
And in
verse 32, Jesus answered them, Many good works have I shewed you from my Father; for
which of those works do ye stone me? The
Jews answered Him, saying, For a good work we stone thee not; but for blasphemy; and
because that thou, being a man, makest thyself God (v. 33).
In trying to stone Jesus, the
Jews pretend to be zealous for the glory of the name of God, for blasphemy is, indeed, a
heinous sin against God. It is speaking
against God or His power or His majesty. It
is attributing to God something evil or denying that He is good. It is a very terrible sin, and one that you and I
must be on our guard against that we ever deny essential truths about God, deny
that His Word is true, deny His goodness and His grace this, and many other things,
would constitute blasphemy.
In the Old Testament, God
prescribes stoning as punishment for blasphemy. Stoning
was a sign of the curse of God just as Christs death on the cross was an
accursed death. The whole congregation was to
participate in that stoning to show their hatred of the sin of blasphemy and their love
for the Lord. Therefore, the Jews pretend to
have a zeal for the law of God by obeying it in this instance. Yet, in doing so, they show their blind hatred of
Jesus as the Christ.
What shows their hatred is,
first of all, the fact that the manner in which they intended to stone Him was illegal in
that day. Rome now governed Judea, and Rome
said the Jews could not put a man to death without the permission of Rome. There has been, however, no trial by Rome. The Jews have taken matters into their own hands
and they are going to stone Jesus.
What also shows their hatred is
that this was a repeated attempt. They had
tried to stone Him previously. At that time
He escaped from them. His time was not yet. But now, having found Him again and not believing
His words, they are ready once more to stone Him who has not sinned. Their justification was that He was a blasphemer,
for He claimed to be God.
But He was God. And He had demonstrated so many times that He was
God. Many good works have I shewed you
from my Father; for which of those works do ye stone me? In changing water into wine, in healing the sick,
in feeding the multitudes, in forgiving sinners in all these things Christ showed
He was the Son of God, for He could do things no mere man could do. But they are blind.
They hate Him and they are going to stone Him.
In response to their attempt to
stone Him, Jesus defends Himself. Now, being
God as to His person, He did not have to defend Himself.
He could have escaped. Or, He could
have caused them to fall down backwards powerless. But
He does defend Himself in order to expose the hardness of their heart and leave them
without excuse. And His defense is clear. He reminds them then of the works that He has done
and how they prove He is the Messiah (vv. 37, 38: If
I do not the works of my Father, believe me not. But
if I do, though ye believe not me, believe the works:
that ye may know, and believe, that the Father is in me, and I in him). Would it not be strange that a man who casts out
devils is not God? Believe that He is God
only God has power over devils. That
is part of Jesus defense the works He has done show He is the Messiah.
The second part of Jesus
defense is His appeal to the Scriptures of the Old Testament. Jesus answered them, Is it not written in
your law, I said, Ye are gods: If he called
them gods, unto whom the word of God came, and the scripture cannot be broken: say ye of him, whom the Father hath sanctified,
and sent into the world, Thou blasphemest; because I said, I am the Son of God? (vv. 35, 36). Jesus quotes
Psalm 82:6.
That psalm is speaking of earthly judges and of
God judging earthly judges. We read in verse
1: God standeth in the congregation of
the mighty; he judgeth among the gods, and then in verses 6 and 7: I have said, Ye are gods; and all of you are
children of the most High. But ye shall die
like men, and fall like one of the princes. In
this psalm God, by the inspired psalmist, is telling the earthly judges that, although
they are gods (not in the sense of being divine in their nature or essence but in the
sense that to them has been entrusted the divine prerogative of judgment), yet they are
merely men and will die like men and will, one day, have to answer to the Judge of the judges, God Himself.
Psalm 82,
therefore,
reminds all earthly judges to judge righteously.
But now Jesus appeals to that
psalm in which God called men, mere mortal sinful humans, gods because of the divine
prerogative that had been entrusted to them, that of earthly judgment. If God called men gods, then why do you hate
Me, you Jews, when I have done no sin but only good and thereby have testified that I am
truly God? asks Jesus. It is in that
connection that He says, And the scripture cannot be broken. There is the clinching of the argument the
infallibility of Scripture.
When Jesus says in verse 35 of
John 10,
And the scripture cannot be broken, He does not mean only that
Psalm 82
cannot be broken that we must take
Psalm 82
for what it says but He has in mind all of Scripture. Scripture cannot be
broken and, therefore, no part of Scripture can be broken.
To break Scripture is to deprive it of its authority. Scripture cannot be broken because its authority
is given from God. No man can take that
authority away. It is true that men act
as though Scripture has no authority, that they disregard it and break its laws. But that does not mean the authority of Scripture
has been truly broken. Just as when a child
rebels against his parents and acts as though his parents have no authority, the
parent still does have authority and the child will be judged for his refusing to
acknowledge it.
Scripture
cannot be broken
because
its authority is given from God.
The reason why the authority of
Scripture is not broken is that it cannot be broken.
You must understand that in our text the word cannot means is not
able to be. So, the reason why
Scripture has no error is that it is not able to be broken.
It is authoritative. Its words stand.
Now, in our day and age, many
people do not agree with this word of Jesus, and they consider Scripture to be fallible,
that is, to contain errors. Some say, All of
Scripture is fallible; none of it is trustworthy. Others
say, Parts of Scripture are fallible. Those
parts that teach us about salvation in Jesus Christ have no errors, but many other parts
of Scripture not closely connected to the teaching of salvation in Christ are erroneous. For example, men might point out that in parallel
passages of Scripture there are discrepancies. We
have four gospel accounts. They do not in
every respect seem to agree in all the details of the history even when they treat the
same historical event. The books of Samuel
and Kings have a parallel account in the books of Chronicles. There, too, there are, some allege, discrepancies. Another sort of error that some say is found in
Scripture is that the New Testament writers quote the Old Testament writers in free style. Sometimes they get the quote wrong;
sometimes they even seem to ascribe it to the wrong source.
Matthew, in one instance, seems to quote Zechariah, but says he quotes Jeremiah. A third instance of errors in Scripture, some
would say, are those in which the teachings of Scripture contradict findings of science
and history. The Bible, they say, speaks of a
flat earth; science tells us it is a sphere. The
Bible speaks of a six 24-hour day creation; science indicates the world evolved. These are examples of some ways in which people
say the Scriptures have errors in them.
What lies behind ones
thinking that there are errors in Scripture? Really,
the answer must be that they view Scripture as not being the Word of God alone, but the
word of man. And men make mistakes. Men write out of their own culture. Mens writings reflect their own limitations. God is not the author, but men. We have already shown from Scripture, however,
that God is the author of Scripture. And God
cannot lie.
Others, perhaps, are prone to
say that Scripture has errors because they desire to appear as learned men before the
world. They would find themselves embarrassed
by the so-called errors of Scripture and so, rather than trying to hold to these so-called
errors as being factual truth, they call them errors to try to earn the respect of the
world.
To all of which, the response of
the child of God is these words of Jesus: And
the scripture cannot be broken.
Because Jesus said it, we are
going to assert it, and we are going to do so as a matter of faith. Scripture is the Word of God. We know our God and we love our God and we know He
cannot lie; therefore we say, Scripture cannot be broken. Should it be that we cannot finally reconcile
these supposed discrepancies found in Scripture, or should it be that we cannot fully
explain Scripture when it appears to contradict itself or when it appears to contradict
the findings of science, we are not going to say that because we cannot explain these
differences therefore Scripture has error. But
instead, our starting point is to say, though we cannot explain it, Scripture is right. There is no error in Scripture.
Because
Jesus said it, we are going to assert it,
and
we are going to do so as a matter of faith.
At the same time, we must
understand that many of these so-called errors can be understood rightly when Scripture is
understood rightly. Scripture interprets
Scripture. When a New Testament writer seems
to quote an Old Testament writer but not accurately, we must understand that God, by
inspiration, is causing that New Testament writer to shed some light on the Old Testament
prophecy or passage that the Old Testament writer himself did not have. And the church of Christ, in order to understand
the Old Testament better, is given the New Testament, and quotes of the Old Testament are
written in the New Testament. Remember that,
if you think that the New Testament writers err in quoting the Old Testament.
Scripture is not always to be
interpreted literally. In that way also we
can resolve some of the supposed discrepancies of Scripture. That there are four corners of the earth is a
poetic device. There is some element of truth
in that. But the expression that the earth
has four corners is not intended to be scientific. However, when in
Genesis 1
we read that the world was created in six days limited by morning and
evening and, therefore, days of twenty-four hours, we must not say, Scripture is
being figurative here. But we can say
rather that God has created the world in such a wonderful way that He has to tell us just
how it is lest we be deceived by the findings of science.
By faith we understand that the worlds were framed by the Word of God.
Now I have only given general
ways in which some of the supposed errors fall away.
We cannot go into them in detail. We
cannot explain every one of them. But the
child of God takes as a starting point, in faith, the words of Christ and accepts them at
their face value, The scripture cannot be broken.
Now Christs use of the
doctrine applies it and illustrates it. For
He refers to the Old Testament. Is it
not written in your law, I said, Ye are gods? Someone
will say immediately, Look, Jesus says He quotes from the law, but in fact He quotes
from the psalms. We must understand
that the word law is used to refer to the whole Old Testament. Jesus speaks of the law and the
prophets. Jesus is not intending to say
here that this statement is taken from the books Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, or
Deuteronomy. But the point is that in the Old
Testament Scriptures the statement is found.
The
child of God takes as a starting point, in faith,
the
words of Christ and accepts them
at
their face value, The scripture cannot be broken.
Furthermore, Christs use
of the doctrine of the infallibility of Scripture illustrates it because His quote makes
more clear that which we find in the Old Testament. The quote as we find it in
Psalm 82:6
says, I have said, Ye are gods. Who is the I who said this? The psalmist, perhaps. Maybe that is the answer, for back in verse 1 we
read, He judgeth among the gods. Is
it the psalmist then who, by inspiration, is telling the Jews, I said earlier you
are gods. I am going to explain here what I
mean? No. Jesus makes clear in His quote of that text that
the I is God Himself. Is it
not written in your laws, I said, Ye are gods? If
He called them gods unto whom the word of God came
. He called them gods. That is, Jesus is making clear here that it is Jehovah God who is the I of
Psalm 82:6.
Therefore,
in two different ways we see that Christs use of the doctrine of the infallibility
of Scripture also illustrates it.
This is the ground, now, that
Jesus used to prove that He has the right to claim to be the Son of God. His works demonstrate it and Scripture permits it. Let not the Jews accuse Him of blasphemy.
This argument we must take to
heart, first of all, by taking at face value that which Scripture teaches. When it teaches that He is the Messiah, we must
believe it. Then, when it teaches that the
Scriptures cannot be broken, we must believe it. If
the Scriptures could be broken, they could not be our guide, our trustworthy guide for all
of life. If they cannot be broken, they are
our guide and will always be able to be our guide. And
you have, dear radio listeners, not my word but the word of Jesus on it: The Scriptures cannot be broken. In them is no error. Bow before it and live.
Let us pray.
Heavenly Father, we pray that if
we might ever have thought that Scripture had errors in it, Thou wilt work faith in our
hearts that it does not and cannot. Whether
we understand how Scripture in every aspect speaks the truth or whether we still have
questions about what Scripture means, nevertheless, cause us to believe that Thy Word is
truth and to bow before it and in that way experience Thy blessing. For Jesus sake, Amen.
Last modified: 15-Sep-2003