Ten
Reasons Why I Believe the Bible is the Word of God
By Reuben Archer Torrey
I
was brought up to believe that the Bible was the Word of God. In
early life I accepted it as such upon the authority of my parents,
and never gave the question any serious thought. But later in life
my faith in the Bible was utterly shattered through the influence of
the writings of a very celebrated, scholarly and brilliant sceptic.
I found myself face to face with the question, Why do you
believe the Bible is the Word of God?
I had no satisfactory answer. I
determined to go to the bottom of this question. If satisfactory
proof could not be found that the Bible was God's Word I would give
the whole thing up, cost what it might. If satisfactory proof could
be found that the Bible was God's Word I would take my stand upon
it, cost what it might. I doubtless had many friends who could have
answered the question satisfactorily, but I was unwilling to confide
to them the struggle that was going on in my own heart; so I sought
help from God and from books, and after much painful study and
thought came out of the darkness of scepticism into the broad
daylight of faith and certainty that the Bible from beginning to end
is God's Word. The following pages are largely the outcome of that
experience of conflict and final victory. I will give Ten Reasons
why I believe the Bible is the Word of God.
FIRST, on the ground of the
testimony of Jesus Christ.
Many people accept the authority
of Christ who do not accept that of the Bible as a whole. We all
must accept His authority. He is accredited to us by five Divine
testimonies: by the testimony of the Divine life He lived; by the
testimony of the Divine words He spoke; by the testimony of the
Divine works He wrought; by the Divine attestation of the
resurrection from the dead; and by the testimony of His Divine
influence upon the history of mankind. But if we accept the
authority of Christ we must accept the authority of the Bible as a
whole. He testifies definitely and specifically to the Divine
authorship of the whole Bible.
We find His testimony as to the
Old Testament in Mark 7:13. Here He calls the law of Moses the "Word
of God." That, of course, covers only the first five books of the
Old Testament, but in Luke 24:27 we read, "And beginning at Moses
and all the prophets, He expounded unto them in all the
Scriptures the things concerning Himself," and in the
forty-fourth verse He said, "All things must be fulfilled which were
written in the law of Moses and in the prophets and the Psalms." The
Jews, divided the Old Testament into three parts--the Law, the
Prophets, and the Psalms--and Christ takes up each of these parts
and sets the stamp of His authority upon it. In John 10:35 Christ
says, "The Scripture cannot be broken," thereby teaching the
absolute accuracy and inviolability of the Old Testament. More
specifically still, it possible, in Matt. 5:18, Jesus says, "One jot
or one tittle shall in no wise pass from the law till all be
fulfilled." A jot is the smallest letter in the Hebrew
alphabet--less than half the size of any other letter, and a tittle
is the merest point of a consonant--less than the cross we put on a
"t,"--and Christ here declares that the Scripture is absolutely
true, down to the smallest letter or point of a letter. So if we
accept the authority of Christ we must accept the Divine authority
of the entire Old Testament.
Now, as to the New Testament. We
find Christ's endorsement of it in John 14:26, "The Holy Ghost, whom
the Father will send in my name, He shall teach you all things and
bring all things to your remembrance, whatsoever I have said unto
you." Here we see that not only was the teaching of the Apostles to
be fully inspired, but also their recollection of what Christ
Himself taught. We are sometimes asked how we know that the Apostles
correctly reported what Jesus said--"may they not have forgotten?"
True, they might forget, but Christ Himself tells us that in the
Gospels we have, not the Apostles' recollection of what He said, but
the Holy Ghost's recollection, and the Spirit of God never forgets.
In John 16:13, 14, Christ said that the Holy Ghost should guide the
Apostles into "all the truth," therefore in the New Testament
teaching we have the whole sphere of God's truth. The teaching of
the Apostles is more complete than that of Jesus Himself, for He
says in John 16:12, "I have yet many things to say unto you, but ye
cannot bear them now. Howbeit, when He, the Spirit of truth is come,
He shall guide you into all the truth." While His own
teaching had been partial, because of their weakness, the teaching
of the Apostles, under the promised Spirit, was to take in the whole
sphere of God's truth.
So if we accept the authority of
Christ we must accept that of the whole Bible, but we must, as
already seen, accept Christ's authority.
SECOND, on the ground of its
fulfilled prophecies.
There are two classes of
prophecies in the Bible--first, the explicit, verbal prophecies,
second, those of the types.
In the first we have the
definite prophecies concerning the Jews, the heathen nations and the
Messiah. Taking the prophecies, regarding the Messiah as an
illustration, look at Isaiah 53, Mic. 5:2, Dan. 9:25-27. Many others
might be mentioned, but these will serve as illustrations. In these
prophecies, written hundreds of years before the Messiah came, we
have the most explicit statements as to the manner and place of His
birth, the manner of His reception by men, how His life would end,
His resurrection and His victory succeeding His death. When made,
these prophecies were exceedingly improbable, and seemingly
impossible of fulfilment; but they were fulfilled to the very
minutest detail of manner and place and time. How are we to account
for it? Man could not have foreseen these improbable events--they
lay hundreds of years ahead--but God could, and it is God who speaks
through these men.
But the prophecies of the types
are more remarkable still. Everything in the Old Testament--history,
institutions, ceremonies--is prophetical. The high priesthood, the
ordinary priesthood, the Levites, the prophets, priests and kings,
are all prophecies. The tabernacle, the brazen altar, the laver, the
golden candlestick, the table of shewbread, the veil, the altar of
incense, the ark of the covenant, the very coverings of the
tabernacle, are prophecies. In all these things, as we study them
minutely and soberly in the light of the history of Jesus Christ and
the church, we see, wrapped up in the ancient institutions ordained
of God to meet an immediate purpose, prophecies of the death,
atonement, and resurrection of Christ, the day of Pentecost, and the
entire history of the church. We see the profoundest Christian
doctrines of the New Testament clearly foreshadowed in these
institutions of the Old Testament. The only way in which you can
appreciate this is to get into the Book itself and study all about
the sacrifices and feasts, etc., till you see the truths of the New
Testament shining out in the Old. If, in studying some elementary
form of life, I find a rudimentary organ, useless now, but by the
process of development to become of use in that animal's descendant,
I say, back of this rudimentary organ is God, who, in the earlier
animal, is preparing for the life and necessities of the animal that
is to come. So, going back to these preparations in the Bible for
the truth that is to be clearly taught at a later day, there is only
one scientific way to account for them, namely, He who knows and
prepares for the end from the beginning is the author of that Book.
THIRD, on the ground of the unity
of the book.
This is an old argument, but a
very satisfactory one. The Bible consists of sixty-six books,
written by more than thirty different men, extending in the period
of its composition over more than fifteen hundred years; written in
three different languages, in many different countries, and by men
on every plane of social life, from the herdman and fisherman and
cheap politician up to the king upon his throne; written under all
sorts of circumstances; yet in all this wonderful conglomeration we
find an absolute unity of thought.
A wonderful thing about it is
that this unity does not lie on the surface. On the surface there is
oftentimes apparent contradiction, and the unity only comes out
after deep and protracted study.
More wonderful yet is the
organic character of this unity, beginning in the first book and
growing till you come to its culmination in the last book of the
Bible. We have first the seed, then the plant, then the bud, then
the blossom, then the ripened fruit.
Suppose a vast building were to
be erected, the stones for which were brought from the quarries in
Rutland, Vermont; Berea, Ohio; Kasota, Minnesota, and Middletown,
Connecticut. Each stone was hewn into final shape in the quarry from
which it was brought. These stones were of all varieties of shape
and size, cubical, rectangular, cylindrical, etc., but when they
were brought together every stone fitted into its place, and when
put together there rose before you a temple absolutely perfect in
every outline, with its domes, sidewalls, buttresses, arches,
transepts--not a gap or a flaw anywhere. How would you account for
it? You would say:
"Back of these individual
workers in the quarries was the master-mind of the architect who
planned it all, and gave to each individual worker his
specifications for the work."
So in this marvelous temple of
God's truth which we call the Bible, whose stones have been quarried
at periods of time and in places so remote from one another, but
where every smallest part fits each other part, we are forced to say
that back of the human hands that wrought was the Master-mind that
thought.
FOURTH, on the ground of the
immeasurable superiority of the teachings of the Bible to those of
any other and all other books.
It is quite fashionable in some
quarters to compare the teachings of the Bible with the teachings of
Zoroaster, and Buddha, and Confucius, and Epictetus, and Socrates,
and Marcus Aurelius Antoninus, and a number of other heathen
authors. The difference between the teachings of the Bible and those
of these men is found in three points--
First, the Bible has in
it nothing but truth, while all the others have truth mixed with
error. It is true Socrates taught how a philosopher ought to die; he
also taught how a woman of the town ought to conduct her business.
Jewels there are in the teachings of these men, but (as Joseph Cook
once said) they are "jewels picked out of the mud."
Second, the Bible
contains all truth. There is not a truth to be found anywhere
on moral or spiritual subjects that you cannot find in substance
within the covers of that old Book. I have often, when speaking upon
this subject, asked anyone to bring me a single truth on moral or
spiritual subjects, which, upon reflection, I could not find within
the covers of this book, and no one has ever been able to do it. I
have taken pains to compare some of the better teachings of infidels
with those of the Bible. They indeed have jewels of thought, but
they are, whether they knew it or not, stolen jewels, and stolen
from the very book they ridicule.
The third point of
superiority is this: the Bible contains more truth than all other
books together. Get together from all literature of ancient and
modern times all the beautiful thoughts you can; put away all the
rubbish; put all these truths that you have culled from the
literature of all ages into one book, and as the result, even then
you will not have a book that will take the place of this one book.
This is not a large book. I hold
in my hand a copy that I carry in my vest pocket and yet in this one
little book there is more of truth than in all the books which man
has produced in all the ages of his history. How will you account
for it? There is only one rational way. This is not man's book, but
God's book.
FIFTH, on the ground of the
history of the book, its victory over attack.
This book has always been hated.
No sooner was it given to the world than it met the hatred of men,
and they tried to stamp it out. Celsus tried it by the brilliancy of
his genius, Porphyry by the depth of his philosophy; but they
failed, Lucian directed against it the shafts of his ridicule,
Diocletian the power of the Roman empire; but they failed. Edicts
backed by all the power of the empire were issued that every Bible
should be burned, and that everyone who had a Bible should be put to
death. For eighteen centuries every engine of destruction that human
science, philosophy, wit, reasoning or brutality could bring to bear
against a book has been brought to bear against that book to stamp
it out of the world, but it has a mightier hold on the world to-day
than ever before.
If that were man's book it would
have been annihilated and forgotten hundreds of years ago, but
because there is in it "the hiding of God's power," though at times
all the great men of the world have been against it, and only an
obscure remnant for it, still it has fulfilled wonderfully the words
of Christ, though not in the sense of the original prophecy, "Heaven
and earth shall pass away, but my word shall not pass away.
SIXTH, on the ground of the
character of those who accept and of those who reject the book.
Two things speak for the
divinity of the Bible--the character of those who accept it, and,
equally, the character of those who reject it. I do not mean by this
that every man who professes to believe the book is better than
every man that does not, but show me a man living an unselfish,
devoted life, one who without reservation has surrendered himself to
do the will of God, and I will show you a man who believes the Bible
to be God's Word. On the other hand, show me a man who rejects the
Divine authority of that book, and I will show you a man living a
life of greed, or lust, or spiritual pride, or self will.
Suppose you have a book
purporting to be by a certain author, and the people best acquainted
with that author say it is his, and the people least acquainted with
him say it is not; which will you believe? Now, the people best
acquainted with God say the Bible is His book; those who are least
acquainted with God say it is not. Which will you believe?
Furthermore, as men grow better
they are more likely to accept the Bible, and as they grow worse
they are more likely to reject it. We have all known men who were
both sinful and unbelieving, who by forsaking their sin lost their
unbelief. Did any of us ever know a man who was sinful and
believing, who by forsaking his sin lost his faith? The nearer men
live to God the more confident they are that the Bible is God's
Word; the farther they get away from Him the more confident they are
that it is not.
Where is the stronghold of the
Bible? In the pure, unselfish, happy home. Where is the stronghold
of infidelity? The gambling hell, the drinking saloon and the
brothel. If a man should walk into a saloon and lay a Bible down
upon the bar, and order a drink, we should think there was a strange
incongruity in his actions, but if he should lay any infidel writing
upon the bar, and order a drink, we would not feel that there was
any incongruity.
SEVENTH, on the ground of the
influence of the book.
There is more power in that
little book to save men, and purify, gladden and beautify their
lives, than in all other literature put together--more power to lift
men up to God. A stream never rises higher than its source, and a
book that has a power to lift men up to God that no other book has,
must have come down from God in a way that no other book was.
I have in mind as I write a man
who was the most complete victim of strong drink I ever knew; a man
of marvelous intellectual gifts, but who had been stupefied and
brutalized and demonized by the power of sin, and he was an infidel.
At last the light of God shone into his darkened heart, and by the
power of that book he has been transformed into one of the humblest,
sweetest, noblest men I know to-day.
What other book would have done
that? What other book has the power to elevate not only individuals
but communities and nations that this book has?
EIGHTH, on the ground of the
inexhaustible depth of the book.
Nothing has been added to it in
eighteen hundred years, yet a man like Bunsen, or Neander, cannot
exhaust it by the study of a lifetime. George Müller read it through
more than one hundred times, and said it was fresher every time he
read it. Could that be true of any other book?
But more wonderful than
this--not only individual men but generations of men for eighteen
hundred years have dug into it and given to the world thousands of
volumes devoted to its exposition, and they have not reached the
bottom of the quarry yet. A book that man produces man can exhaust,
but all men together have not been able to get to the bottom of this
book. How are you going to account for it? Only in this way--that in
this book are hidden the infinite and inexhaustible treasures of the
wisdom and knowledge of God.
A brilliant Unitarian writer, in
trying to disprove the inspiration of the Bible, says: "How
irreligious to charge an infinite God with having written His whole
Word in so small a book." He does not see how his argument can be
turned against himself. What a testimony it is to the divinity of
this book that such infinite wisdom is stored away in so small a
compass.
NINTH, on the ground of the fact
that as we grow in knowledge and holiness we grow toward the Bible.
Every thoughtful person when he
starts out to study the Bible finds many things with which he does
not agree, but as he goes on studying and growing in likeness to
God, the nearer he gets to God the nearer he gets to the Bible. The
nearer and nearer we get to God's standpoint the less and less
becomes the disagreement between us and the Bible. What is the
inevitable mathematical conclusion? When we get where God is, we and
the Bible will meet. In other words, the Bible was written from
God's standpoint.
Suppose you are traveling
through a forest under the conduct of an experienced and highly
recommended guide. You come to a place where two roads diverge. The
guide says the road to the left is the one to take, but your own
judgment passing upon the facts before it sees clear evidence that
the road to the right is the one to take. You turn and say to the
guide,
"I know you have had large
experience in this forest, and you have come to me highly
recommended, but my own judgment tells me clearly that the road to
the right is the one we should take, and I must follow my own
judgment. I know my reason is not infallible, but it is the best
guide I have."
But after you have followed that
path for some distance you are obliged to stop, turn around and go
back and take the path which the guide said was the right one.
After a while you come to
another place where two roads diverge. Now the guide says the road
to the right is the one to take, but your judgment clearly says the
one to the left is the one to take, and again you follow your own
judgment with the same result as before.
After you had this experience
forty or fifty times, and found yourself wrong every time, I think
you would have sense enough the next time to follow the guide.
That is just my experience with
the Bible. I received it at first on the authority of others. Like
almost all other young men, my confidence became shaken, and I came
to the fork in the road more than forty times, and I followed, my
own reason, and in the outcome found myself wrong and the Bible
right every time, and I trust that from this time on I shall have
sense enough to follow the teachings of the Bible whatever my own
judgment may say.
TENTH, on the ground of the
direct testimony of the Holy Spirit.
We began with God and shall end
with God. We began with the testimony of the second person of the
Trinity, and shall close with that of the third person of the
Trinity.
The Holy Spirit sets His seal in
the soul of every believer to the Divine authority of the Bible. It
is possible to get to a place where we need no argument to prove
that the Bible is God's Word. Christ says, "My sheep know my voice,"
and God's children know His voice, and I know that the voice that
speaks to me from the pages of that Book is the voice of my Father.
You will sometimes meet a pious old lady, who tells you that she
knows that the Bible is God's Word, and when you ask her for a
reason for believing that it is God's Word she can give you none,
She simply says:
"I know it is God's Word."
You say: "That is mere
superstition."
Not at all. She is one of
Christ's sheep, and recognizes her Shepherd's voice from every other
voice. She is one of God's children, and knows the voice which
speaks to her from the Bible is the voice of God. She is above
argument.
Everyone can have that
testimony. John 7:17 (R. V.,) tells you how to get it. "If any man
willeth to do His will, he shall know of the teaching, whether it be
of God." Just surrender your will to the will of God, no matter
where it carries you, and you will put yourself in such an attitude
toward God that when you read this book you will recognize that the
voice that speaks to you from it is the voice of the God to whom you
have surrendered your will.
Some time ago, when I was
speaking to our students upon how to deal with sceptics, there was
in the audience a graduate of a British University who had fallen
into utter scepticism. At the close of the lecture he came to me and
said:
"I don't wish to be
discourteous, sir, but my experience contradicts everything you have
said."
I asked him if he had followed
the course of action that I had suggested and not found light. He
said that he had. Stepping into another room I had a pledge written
out running somewhat as follows:
"I believe there is an absolute
difference between right and wrong, and I hereby take my stand upon
the right, to follow it wherever it carries me. I promise earnestly
to endeavor to find out what the truth is, and if I ever find that
Jesus Christ is the Son of God, I promise to accept Him as my Savior
and confess Him before the world."
I handed the paper to the
gentleman and asked him if he was willing to sign it. He answered,
"Certainly," and did sign it. I said to him:
"You don't know there is not a
God, and you don't know that God doesn't answer prayer. I know He
does, but my knowledge cannot avail for you, but here is a possible
clew to knowledge. Now you have promised to search earnestly for the
truth, so you will follow this possible clue. I want you to offer a
prayer like this: 'Oh, God, if there be any God, and thou dost
answer prayer, show me whether Jesus Christ is thy Son, and if you
show me He is, I will accept Him as my Savior and confess Him before
the world.'"
This he agreed to do. I further
requested that he would take the Gospel of John and read in it every
day, reading only a few verses at a time slowly and thoughtfully,
every time before he read asking God to give him light. This he also
agreed to do, but he finished by saying, "There is nothing in it."
However, at the end of a short time, I met him again, and he said to
me, "There is something in that." I replied, "I knew that." Then he
went on to say it seemed just as if he had been caught up by the
Niagara river and had been carried along, and that before long he
would be a shouting Methodist.
A short time ago I met this
gentleman again, and he said to me that he could not understand how
he had been so blind, how he had ever listened to the reasoning
which he had; that it seemed to him utterly foolish now. I replied
that the Bible would explain this to him, that the "natural man
receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God," but that now he had
put himself into the right attitude towards God and His truth,
everything had been made plain. That man, who assured me that he was
"a very peculiar man," and that methods that influenced others would
not influence him, by putting himself into the right attitude
towards God, got to a place where he received the direct testimony
of the Holy Ghost that this Bible is God's Word; and, any one else
can do the same.