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Have
you tried to show someone the historical reliability of the Scriptures, and not
known where to start? A quick trip to your local well-stocked Christian
bookstore likely will overwhelm you. Where among the dozens of impressive,
comprehensive reference books should you start?
Fortunately,
while there is a wealth of information available to support the reliability of
Scripture, you don’t have to burn, the midnight oil to give a reasonable answer
to those who ask, “How can we know the Bible is reliable?” Four basic principle
chart your way to understanding basic biblical reliability.
To
help you remember, I’ve developed the simple acronym “MAPS.” Remember the word MAPS and you will be able to chart
Bible reliability.
Manuscripts
Manuscripts relates to the tests
used to determine the reliability of the extant manuscript copies of the original documents penned by the
Scripture writers (we do not possess these originals). In determining
manuscript reliability, we deal with the question: How can we test to see that
the text we possess in the manuscript copies is an accurate rendition of the original? There are three main manuscript
tests: the Bibliographic, Eyewitness, and External (a second acronym — BEE — will help you remember these).
The
bibliographic test considers the
quantity of manuscripts and manuscript fragments, and also the time span
between the original documents and our earliest copies. The more copies, the
better able we are to work back to the original. The closer the time span
between the copies and the original, the less likely it is that serious textual
error would creep in. The Bible has stronger bibliographic support than any
classical literature — including Homer, Tacitus, Pliny, and Aristotle.
We
have more than 14,000 manuscripts and fragments of the Old Testament of three
main types: (a) approximately 10,000 from the Cairo Geniza (storeroom) find of
1897, dating back as far as about AD. 800; (b) about 190 from the Dead Sea
Scrolls find of 1947-1955, the oldest dating back to 250-200 B.C.; and (c) at
least 4,314 assorted other copies. The short time between the original Old
Testament manuscripts (completed around 400 B.C.) and the first extensive
copies (about 250 B.C.) — coupled with the more than 14,000 copies that have
been discovered — ensures the trustworthiness of the Old Testament text. The earliest
quoted verses (Num. 6:24-26) date from 800-700 B.C.
The
same is true of the New Testament text. The abundance of textual witnesses is
amazing. We possess over 5,300 manuscripts or portions of the (Greek) New
Testament — almost 800 copied before A.D. 1000. The time between the original
composition and our earliest copies is an unbelievably short 60 years or so.
The overwhelming bibliographic reliability of the Bible is
clearly evident.
The
eyewitness document test (“E”), sometimes referred to as the internal
test,
focuses on the eyewitness credentials of the authors. The Old and New Testament
authors were eyewitnesses of — or interviewed eyewitnesses of — the majority
of the events they described. Moses participated in and was an eyewitness of
the remarkable events of the Egyptian captivity, the Exodus, the forty years in
the desert, and Israel’s final encampment before entering the Promised Land.
These events he chronicled in the first five books of the Old Testament.
The
New Testament writers had the same eyewitness authenticity. Luke, who wrote the
Books of Luke and Acts, says that he gathered eyewitness testimony and
“carefully investigated everything” (Luke 1:1-3). Peter reminded his readers
that the disciples “were eyewitnesses of [Jesus’] majesty” and “did not follow
cleverly invented stories” (2 Pet. 1:16). Truly, the Bible affirms the eyewitness credibility of its writers.
The
external evidence test looks outside the texts themselves to
ascertain the historical reliability of the historical events, geographical
locations, and cultural consistency of the biblical texts. Unlike writings from
other world religions which make no historical references or which fabricate
histories, the Bible refers to historical events and assumes its historical accuracy.
The Bible is not
only
the inspired Word of God, it is also a history book — and the historical
assertions it makes have been proven time and again.
Many
of the events, people, places, and customs in the New Testament are confirmed
by secular historians who were almost contemporaries with New Testament
writers. Secular historians like the Jewish Josephus (before A.D. 100), the
Roman Tacitus (around A.D. 120), the Roman Suetonius (A.D. 110), and the Roman
governor Pliny Secundus (A.D. 100-110) make direct reference to Jesus or affirm
one or more historical New Testament references. Early church leaders such as
Irenaeus, Tertullian, Julius Africanus, and Clement of Rome — all writing
before A.D. 250 — shed light on New Testament historical accuracy. Even
skeptical historians agree that the New Testament is a remarkable historical
document. Hence, it is clear that there is strong external
evidence
to support the Bible’s manuscript reliability.
Archaeology
Returning
to our MAPS acronym, we have established
,the first principle, manuscript reliability. Let us
consider our second principle, archaeological evidence. Over and
over again, comprehensive field work (archaeology) and careful biblical
interpretation affirms the reliability of the Bible. It is telling when a
secular scholar must revise his biblical criticism in light of solid
archaeological evidence.
For
years critics dismissed the Book of Daniel, partly because there was no
evidence that a king named Belshazzar ruled in Babylon during that time period.
However, later archaeological research confirmed that the reigning monarch,
Nabonidus, appointed Belshazzar as his co-regent whi1e he was away from
Babylon.
One
of the most well-known New Testament examples concerns the Books of Luke and
Acts. A biblical skeptic, Sir William Ramsay, trained as an archaeologist and
then set out to disprove the historical reliability of this portion of the New
Testament. However, through his painstaking Mediterranean archaeological trips,
he became converted as — one after another — of the historical statements of
Luke were proved accurate. Archaeological evidence thus confirms the
trustworthiness of the Bible.
Prophecy
The
third principle of Bible reliability is Prophecy, or predictive ability. The
Bible records predictions of events that could not be known or predicted by
chance or common sense. Surprisingly, the predictive nature of many Bible
passages was once a popular argument (by liberals) against the reliability of the Bible.
Critics argued that the prophecies actually were written after the events and
that editors had merely dressed up the Bible text to look like they contained
predictions made before the events. Nothing could be further from the truth,
however. The many predictions of Christ’s birth, life and death (see below)
were indisputably rendered more than a century before they occurred as proven
by the Dead Sea Scrolls of Isaiah and other prophetic books as well as by the
Septuagint translation, all dating from earlier than 100 B.C.
Old
Testament prophecies concerning the Phoenician city of Tyre were fulfilled in
ancient times, including prophecies that the city would be opposed by many
nations (Ezek. 26:3); its walls would be destroyed and towers broken down
(26:4); and its stones, timbers, and debris would be thrown into the water
(26:12). Similar prophecies were fulfilled concerning Sidon (Ezek. 28:23; Isa.
23; Jer. 27:3-6; 47:4) and Babylon (Jer. 50:13, 39; 51:26, 42-43, 58; Isa.
13:20-21).
Since
Christ is the culminating theme of the Old Testament and the Living Word of the
New Testament, it should not surprise us that prophecies regarding Him
outnumber any others. Many of these prophecies would have been impossible for
Jesus to deliberately conspire to fulfill — such as His descent from Abraham, Isaac,
and Jacob (Gen. 12:3; 17:19; Num. 24:21-24); His birth in Bethlehem (Mic. 5:2);
His crucifixion with criminals (Isa. 53:12); the piercing of His hands and feet
at the crucifixion (Ps. 22:16); the soldiers’ gambling for His clothes (Ps.
22:18); the piercing of His side and the fact that His bones were not broken at
His death (Zech. 12:10; Ps. 34:20); and His burial among the rich (Isa. 53:9).
Jesus also predicted His own death and resurrection (John 2:19-22). Predictive
Prophecy
is a principle of Bible reliability that often reaches even the hard-boiled
skeptic!
Statistics
Our
fourth MAPS principle works well with
predictive prophecy, because it is Statistically preposterous that any or all
of the Bible’s very specific, detailed prophecies could have been fulfilled
through chance, good guessing, or deliberate deceit. When you look at some of the
improbable prophecies of the Old and New Testaments, it seems incredible that
skeptics — knowing the authenticity and historicity of the texts — could reject
the statistical verdict: the Bible is the Word of God, and Jesus Christ is the
Son of God, just as Scripture predicted many times and in many ways.
The
Bible was written over a span of 1500 years by forty different human authors in
three different languages (Hebrew, Aramaic, and Greek), on hundreds of
subjects. And yet there is one consistent, noncontradictory theme that runs
through it all: God’s
redemption of humankind.
Clearly, Statistical probability is a powerful indicator of the trustworthiness
of Scripture.
The
next time someone denies the reliability of Scripture, just remember the
acronym MAPS, and you will be equipped to
give an answer and a reason for the hope that lies within you (1 Pet. 3:15). Manuscripts,
Archaeology,
Prophecy,
and Statistics not only chart a secure course
on the turnpikes of skepticism but also demonstrate definitively that the Bible
is indeed divine rather than human in origin.
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