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Inerrancy and inspiration of the Bible
The Christian Church as a whole claims that the
Bible is inspired and inerrant. This means that God is the one who
moved through the writers to communicate to us the words which God
wanted us to hear. This inspiration, however, is not a
dictation, but a movement of God's spirit through the writer,
utilizing the personality and style of the writer. Inerrancy
means that all that is written in the inspired documents is without
error. Now, there is a comment worth mentioning here.
Inspiration and inerrancy applies to the original writings, not to the
copies. In other words, it is the original writings that are
without error. The copies, sadly, have copyist errors in
them.
Therefore, when critics
of the Bible point out apparent
contradictions, what they are doing is either failing to understand
the context of the passages they are examining, or they have
encountered a scribal copying error. The fact is that there are
indeed copyist errors on the biblical documents and they account for
many alleged contradictions. Remember, it is the autographs
(original writings) that are inspired and inerrant, not the copies. The copies we have now are
copies of inspired documents. The copies are not themselves
"inspired"; that is, they have no guarantee of being 100% textually
pure. Does this then mean that we can't trust the Bible?
Not at all. The copies are so accurate that all of the biblical
documents are 98.5% textually
pure. The 1.5% that is in question is mainly nothing more than
spelling errors and occasional word omissions like the words
"the", "but", etc. This reduces any serious
textual issues to a fraction of the 1.5%. Nevertheless, nothing
affects doctrinal truths. In fact, nothing in ancient
history even comes close to the accuracy of the New Testament
documents. If the New Testament is disallowed, then all other
documents of ancient history (Plato, Aristotle, Homer, etc.), must
also be disallowed because the biblical documents are far superior in
their copying accuracy than any other ancient literature in existence.
See the chart below for further information on this.
Nevertheless, following is a list of the types of errors that have
crept into the Bible:
-
Dittography - Writing
twice what should have been written once.
-
Fission - Improperly
dividing one word into to words.
-
Fusion - Combining
the last letter of one word with the first letter of the next word.
-
Haplography - Writing
once what should have been written twice.
-
Homophony - Writing a
word with a different meaning for another word when both words have the
exact same pronunciation.
-
Metathesis - An
improper exchange in the order of letters.
Does this mean that the Bible we hold in our hand is
not inspired? Not at all. Inspiration comes from God and when He inspired
the Bible, it was perfect. Our copies of the original documents are not
perfect, but they are very close to being so. The critics often
mistakenly assume that even the copies are supposed to be perfect. But
when I point out that God never said the copies would be perfect, they then
ask how can the Bible be trusted at all? Quite simply, it is redundant
in its facts and information sufficiently to guarantee accuracy.
Compared to other ancient documents, the New Testament,
for example, has far more textual evidence in its favor than any other
ancient writing. Please consider the chart below.
|
Author |
When Written |
Earliest Copy |
Time Span |
No. of Copies |
|
Homer (Iliad) |
900 BC |
400 BC |
500 years |
643 |
|
Ceasar (The Gallic Wars) |
100 - 44
BC |
900 AD |
1,000
years |
10 |
|
Plato (Tetralogies) |
427 - 347
BC |
900 AD |
1,200
years |
7 |
|
Aristotle |
384 - 322
BC |
1,100 AD |
1,400
years |
49 |
|
Herodotus (History) |
480 - 425
BC |
900 AD |
1,300
years |
8 |
|
Euripedes |
480 - 406
BC |
1,100 AD |
1,500
years |
9 |
| New
Testament |
50 - 90
A.D. |
130 AD
|
30 years |
24,000 |
|
This chart was adapted
from charts in Evidence that Demands a Verdict, by Josh
McDowell, 1979, pages 42 and 43. |
If the Bible cannot be trusted as being reliable
because it has only a small percentage of copyist errors, then neither can
the above documents be trusted that have far less textual support.
Therefore, we can see that the Bible is an ancient
document that has withstood thousands of years of transmission with
remarkable accuracy and clarity. We can trust it to be what it says it
is: the word of God.
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