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CAN YOU KNOW RATIONALLY IF THE BIBLE IS THE WORD OF
GOD?
By Eric V. Snow
It is commonly said Christians who believe the Bible is
the inspired word of God are engaging in blind faith, and
can't prove God did so. But is
this true? By the
fact the Bible's prophets
have repeatedly predicted the future
successfully, we can know beyond
reasonable doubt the
Bible is not just merely reliable in
its history, but is inspired by God. By contrast, compare the reliability of the
Bible’s prophets to the supermarket tabloids’ psychics, who are almost always
wrong even about events in the near future.
The prophet Isaiah gave his prophecies
in the general period c. 740-700
b.c., long before the destruction of
Jerusalem by the Babylonian king, Nebuchnezzar, in 586 b.c. He predicted the destruction of the city
of Babylon (Isa. 13:19-20): "And Babylon,
the beauty of the kingdoms, the glory of the Chaldeans' pride, will be as when God overthrew Sodom and Gomorrah. It will
never be inhabited or lived in from generation to
generation . . ." This vast
city had (if we can trust the ancient Greek
historian Herodotus, who was probably exaggerating) a 56-mile circumference,
14-mile sides, walls 311 feet high and 87 feet wide, and occupied 196 square
miles (including protected farmland within
the outer walls). In modern terms, it would be equivalent to predicting the complete destruction and permanent desolation
of New York, London, or Tokyo. Additionally,
to predict the site wouldn't be rebuilt upon was particularly bold, since this was a common occurrence after a city
was destroyed in the ancient Middle East.
Yet this prediction was fulfilled! After the ancient Greek geographer and
historian Strabo visited the site of
the city during the reign of the Roman emperor Augustus (27 b.c.-14 A.D.),
he commented: "The great city has become
a desert."
The
prophet Zephaniah predicted the destruction of Nineveh, the capital of the ancient empire of Assyria
(Zeph. 2:13): "And He (God) will stretch out His hand against the north and
destroy Assyria, and He will make Nineveh a desolation." Similarly, the prophet Nahum
predicted Nineveh's destruction (Nahum 2:10; 3:19), with the help of a flood (Nahum 2:6), during which many of its
people would be drunk (Nahum 1:10),
and would be burned as well (Nahum 3:13). Zephaniah was written about
627 b.c., and Nahum somewhere between 661 and
612 b.c. Nineveh, like Babylon, was one of the world's greatest
cities, for its inner wall was 100 feet
tall and 50 feet thick, complete with a 150-foot-wide moat, and a 7-mile circumference. But these protective features didn’t
save it. As predicted (Nahum 3:12), the huge city fell easily, after a mere three-month siege, to the
forces of the Medes, Scythians, and Babylonians under Nabopolassar in
612 b.c. All of Nahum's specific
predictions about how Nineveh would fall
were fulfilled, which can’t sensibly be seen as mere coincidences.
The
prophet Daniel, who wrote during the period 605-536 b.c., predicted
the destruction of the Persian empire
by Greece. "While I was observing (in a prophetic vision), behold, a male goat was coming from the
west over the surface of the whole earth
without touching the ground; and the goat had a conspicuous horn between his eyes. And he came up to the ram that had the two
horns, which I had seen standing in
front of the canal, and rushed at him in his mighty wrath. . . . So he
hurled him to the ground and trampled on
him, and there was none to rescue the ram from his power. . . . The ram which you saw with two horns represented
the kings of Media and Persia. And
the shaggy goat represented the kingdom of Greece, and the large horn that
is between his eyes is the first king" (Daniel 8:5-7, 20-21). More than
two hundred years after Daniel's death,
Alexander the Great's invasion and
conquest of Persia (334-330 b.c.) fulfilled this prophecy.
Likewise,
Daniel foresaw the division of Alexander's empire into four parts after his death. "Then the
male goat magnified himself exceedingly. But as soon as he was mighty, the large horn
was broken; and in its place there came up four conspicuous horns toward the four winds of heaven. (The
large horn that is between his eyes
is the first king. And the broken horn and the four horns that arose in its place represent four kingdoms which will arise
from his nation, although not with his power"
(Dan. 8:8, 21-22). This was fulfilled, as Alexander's empire was divided up among four of his generals: 1. Ptolemy (Soter), 2. Seleucus (Nicator),
3. Lysimachus, and 4. Cassander.
Arguments
that Daniel was written in the second century b.c. after these events, thus
making it only history in disguise, ignore
how the style of its vocabulary, syntax, and morphology doesn't fit the
second century b.c. As the Old Testament scholar Gleason L. Archer comments (Encyclopedia of Bible
Difficulties, p. 283): "Hence these chapters could not have
been composed as late as the second
century or the third century, but rather--based on purely philological grounds--they have to be dated in the
fifth or late sixth century."
To insist otherwise is to be guilty of
circular reasoning: An anti-theistic a
priori (ahead of experience) bias rules out the possibility of God’s
inspiring the Bible ahead of considering the facts, which then is assumed to
“prove” that God didn’t inspire the Bible!
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Why does God Allow Evil? Click here:
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May Christians work on Saturdays?
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Is the United States the Beast?
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