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Guidelines: Part 2 HOW DO YOU KNOW THE BIBLE IS
FROM GOD?
By J. Vernon McGee
HOW DO YOU KNOW THE BIBLE IS FROM GOD?
How do you know the Bible is the Word of God? This
is a good question, and it should be asked and answered.
1. Preservation—One of the objective proofs,
one of the external proofs, has been the marvelous preservation
of the Bible. There was a king of old—we read about him in
Jeremiah—who, when the Word was sent to him, took a penknife
and cut it to pieces. But it was rewritten, and we have that Word
today. Down through the centuries there have been a great many Bible
burnings. Today there’s a great deal of antagonism toward
the Bible. In our country today it is not being burned because we
think that we are too civilized for such behavior. The way they
try to get rid of it is just to outlaw it in our schools and in
many other places. (Yet we talk about our freedom of religion and
freedom of speech.) In spite of all the attacks that have been made
upon the Bible, it still today exists, and, of course, it’s
one of the best sellers. For many years it was the best seller,
but it’s not today. I regret to have to say that, but it is
true. And that is certainly a commentary on our contemporary society.
It reveals that the Bible is not really occupying the place that
it once did in the history and in the life of this nation. Yet,
I think the amazing preservation of the Word of God is worthy of
consideration.
2. Archaeology—Another way in which we can
know the Bible is the Word of God is through archaeology. The spade
of the archaeologist has turned up many things that have proven
that it is the Word of God. For instance, there were those who for
many years denied the Mosaic authorship of the Pentateuch on the
basis that writing was not in existence in Moses’ day. You
haven’t heard anybody advance that theory recently, have you?
Well, of course not. For years the spade of the archaeologist has
turned up again and again evidence of the validity of the Bible.
The city of Jericho and the walls that fell down is one example.
Now there has been some argument between Miss Kathleen Kenyon and
John Garstang relative to specifics, but it’s well established
that the walls fell down, and I’ll let them debate about the
time and all that sort of thing. The Word of God has been substantiated
there, and in many other ways archaeology has demonstrated the accuracy
of the Bible. Many of the manuscripts that have been found do that
also. It’s quite interesting that when the Isaiah scrolls,
the Dead Sea scrolls, were found, the liberal leaped at that because
he thought he had found an argument that would discredit the Bible.
However, the scrolls have not discredited the Bible, and it seems
that the liberal has lost a great deal of interest in them. This
is a field into which you might do some research, as I cannot go
to any great length in this brief study.
3. Fulfilled Prophecy—If I were asked today
if I had just one thing to suggest that would be a conclusive proof
that the Bible is the Word of God, do you know what I would suggest?
I would suggest fulfilled prophecy. Fulfilled prophecy is the one
proof that you can’t escape, you can’t get around. And
the Bible is filled with fulfilled prophecy. One-fourth of the Scripture,
when it was written, was prophetic; that is, it announced things
that were to take place in the future. A great deal of that—in
fact, a great deal more than people imagine—has already been
fulfilled. We could turn to many places where prophecy has been
fulfilled exactly. We find that there were many local situations
that were fulfilled even in the day of the prophet. For example,
Micaiah was the prophet who told Ahab that if he went out to battle
as he planned, he would lose the battle and would be killed. However,
Ahab's false prophets had told him he’d have a victory and
would return as a victorious king. Because he didn’t like
what Micaiah said, Ahab ordered him locked up and fed bread and
water, and he would take care of him when he got back. But Micaiah
shot back the last word, “If you come back at all, the Lord
hasn’t spoken by me.” Well, evidently the Lord had spoken
by him because Ahab didn’t come back. He was killed in the
battle, and his army was defeated. He had even disguised himself
so that there would be no danger of his losing his life. But an
enemy soldier, the Scripture says, pulled his bow at a venture;
that is, when the battle was about over, he had just one arrow left
in his quiver; he put it in place and shot, not really aiming at
anything. But, you know, that arrow had old Ahab’s name on
it, and it found him. It went right to its mark. Why? Because Micaiah
had made an accurate prophecy (see 1 Kings 22).
On another occasion, the prophet Isaiah said that
the invading Assyrian army wouldn’t shoot an arrow into the
city of Jerusalem (see 2 Kings 19:32). Well, now, that’s interesting.
Micaiah’s prophecy was fulfilled because a soldier shot an
arrow by chance, pulled his bow at a venture. Wouldn’t you
think that among two hundred thousand soldiers—that “great
host”—perhaps one might be trigger-happy and would pull
his bow at a venture and let an arrow fly over the wall of Jerusalem?
Well, he didn’t. If the enemy had shot an arrow inside that
city, they could be sure that Isaiah was not God’s prophet.
But he was, as was proven by this local fulfillment of his prophecy.
But Isaiah also said a virgin would bring forth a child, and that
was seven hundred years before it was literally fulfilled. And then,
if you want a final proof, there were over three hundred prophecies
concerning the first coming of Christ which were all literally fulfilled.
As Jesus Christ was hanging there on the cross and dying, there
was one prophecy recorded in the Old Testament that had not been
fulfilled. It was, “They gave me vinegar to drink” (Psalms
69:21). Jesus said, “I thirst,” and the enemy himself
went and fulfilled prophecy (see John 19:28-30). It’s a most
amazing thing. Men can’t guess like that. It has been rather
amusing to watch the weatherman. During the summer season in Southern
California he does fine, but when we get to the change of seasons—well,
your guess is as good as his. In the nation Israel, a prophet had
to be accurate. If he was not accurate, he was to be put to death
as a false prophet. God told His people that they would be able
to distinguish a false prophet from a true prophet. A true prophet
must first speak into a local situation, which Isaiah did. When
that prophecy came to pass, they would know they could trust him
to speak concerning the future, as Isaiah did. We can look back
now and know that it was fulfilled.
There are so many other prophecies. Tyre and Sidon
are over there today exactly as God’s Word said twenty-five
hundred years ago they would be. Egypt today is in the exact position
God said it would be in. All of these are amazing, friend, and fulfilled
prophecy is one of the greatest proofs that the Bible is indeed
the Word of God. You see, men just can’t be that accurate.
Men can’t guess like that—even the weatherman misses
it.
Let me show you that, according to mathematical law
of problematical conjecture, man could never, never prophesy. Suppose
that right now I would make a prophecy. Just by way of illustration,
suppose I’d say that wherever you are it’s going to
rain tomorrow. I’d have a 50 percent change of being right
because it’ll do one of the two. For some of you it would
probably be accurate. For others it would not. But suppose that
I add to that and say it would start raining tomorrow morning at
nine o’clock. That would be another uncertain element. I had
a fifty-fifty chance of being right at first; now I have a 25 percent
chance. Every uncertain element that is added reduces by 50 percent
the chance of my being right—the law of problematical conjecture.
Now suppose that I not only say that it’s going to start raining
at nine o’clock, but I also say it’ll stop raining at
two o’clock. Well, believe me, friend, that has reduced my
chances now another 50 percent which brings it down to 12 ½
percent. Can you imagine my chance of being right now? But suppose
I add three hundred uncertain elements. There’s not a ghost
of a chance of being accurate. I just couldn’t hit it—it
would be impossible. Yet the Word of God hit it, my friend. It is
accurate. The Bible has moved into that area of absolute impossibility,
and that to me is absolute proof that it is the Word of God. There
is nothing to compare to it at all. I have given very few examples
of fulfilled prophecy, but there is in the Word of God prophecy
after prophecy, and they have been fulfilled—literally fulfilled.
And by the way, I would think that that indicates the method in
which prophecy for the future is yet to be fulfilled.
4. Transformed Lives—I offer two final reasons
as proof that the Bible is the Word of God. One is the transformed
lives of believers today. I have seen what the Word of God can do
in the lives of men and women. I’m thinking right now of a
man in Oakland, California, who listened to my Bible-teaching program.
I know this man. I’m not going into detail in his life at
all, but he probably had as many problems, as many hang-ups, and
he was in as much sin as any man that I know anything about. And
this man began to listen to the radio program. I hear of people
who just hear the Gospel once and are converted. I think it’s
possible and that it’s wonderful. But this man listened to
it week after week, and he became antagonistic. He became angry.
Later he said to me, “If I could have gotten to you when you
were teaching the Epistle to the Romans and told me that I was a
sinner, I would have hit you in the nose,” and frankly friend,
I think he could have done it. He’s much bigger and much younger
than I am. I’m glad he couldn’t get to me. Finally,
this man turned to Christ. May I say to you, it has been wonderful
to see what God has done in his life. Again and again and again
this testimony could be multiplied. Young and old have found purpose
and fulfillment in life, marriages have been saved, families reunited,
individuals have been freed from alcoholism and drug addiction.
Folk have had their lives transformed by coming to Christ. Now let
me give you a reason. When I finished seminary, I was a preacher
who majored in the realm of the defense of the Gospel, and I attempted
to defend the Bible. In fact, I think every message I gave entered
into that area. I felt if I could just get enough answers to the
questions that people have for not believing the Bible that they
would believe. But I found out that the worst thing I could do was
to whip a man down intellectually. The minute I did that, I made
an enemy and never could win him for the Lord. So I moved out of
the realm of apologetics and into another area of just giving out
the Word of God as simply as I could. Only the Bible can turn a
sinner into a saint.
5. Spirit of God Made it Real—Another reason
that I’ve moved out of the realm of apologetics is because
there has been a certain development in my own life. I have reached
the place today where I not only believe that the Bible is the Word
of God, I know it’s the Word of God. And I know it’s
the Word of God because the Spirit of God has made it real to my
own heart and my own life. That is the thing that Paul talked to
the Colossians about. He prayed that they “might be filled
with the knowledge of his will in all wisdom and spiritual understanding.”
I also want this, because I found out that the Spirit of God can
confirm these things to your heart and that you don’t need
archaeology or anything else to prove that the Bible is God’s
Word. A young preacher said to me some time ago, “Dr. McGee,
isn’t it wonderful that they have discovered this,”
and he mentioned something in particular. And I said, “Well,
I don’t see anything to be excited about.” He was greatly
disappointed and even chagrined that I was so far away from it that
I did not respond enthusiastically. “Why, what do you mean?”
he asked. “Is it possible that this hasn’t impressed
you?” Well, I answered him this way, “I already knew
it was the Word of God long before the spade of the archaeologist
turned that up.” He asked how I knew it, and I said, “The
Spirit of God has been making it real to my own heart.” I
trust that the Spirit of God is going to make the Word of God not
only real to you to incorporate into your living, but that He is
also going to give you that assurance that you can say, “I
know that it’s the Word of God.”
Whence but from Heaven, could men unskilled in arts,
In several ages born, in several parts,
Weave such agreeing truths, or how, or why,
Should all conspire to cheat us with a lie?
Unasked their pains, ungrateful their advice,
Starving their gain, and martyrdom their price.
—Dryden
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