THE INFALLIBLE
WORD OF GOD
Dr. W. A. Criswell
2 Peter 1:20-21
6-9-85 10:50 a.m.
This is the pastor of the First Baptist Church in Dallas,
delivering the morning message entitled: The Infallible Word of God. In
the passage that you just read from 2 Timothy, there's a declarative avowal:
“All Scripture;” all of it—not just some of it, all of it. These liberals say
it is inspired in spots and they are inspired to pick out the spots. It says
all of it. All of it: “All Scripture is given by inspiration of God;” then
follows an avowal, an imperative: “I charge thee therefore before God, and the
Lord Jesus Christ, who shall judge the quick and the dead at His appearing and
His kingdom. Preach the Word.” [2 Timothy
4:1,2] —My great assignment. But can I do that and be intellectually
honest? Can I preach this Bible, all of it, from the first of Genesis to the
last of Revelation? Can I preach this Bible and be intellectually true to
myself and to those who might listen to me?
From the beginning of the human race, the attack of Satan
has been against the Word of God. He is a subtle beast, the most subtle, the
most subtle serpent of the field. And this is the burning point of his
castigation. In the beginning, in the Garden of Eden, it was Satan who said to
our first parents: “Yea, hath God said,” casting doubt upon the inspiration and
truth of the Word of God. And from that beginning day until this, the phalanx
of the marching and castigation and criticism and destructive denunciation of
the faith of God has always been against His Word.
In 200 A.D., the Neoplatonist philosopher, Plotinus, became
aware, and fearfully so of the growing numbers and power of the Christians in
the Greco-Roman Empire. And seeing his Neoplatonic philosophy threatened by
these growing numerically, intensive Christians, he asked his most brilliant
student, Porphyry, to study and to write books against them. When Porphyry
began to study the Christian preachers throughout that Roman Empire, he noticed
that he held a codex in his hand. That is, he cut up the scrolls of the Old
Testament Scriptures, and bound them in the back. A codex; you call it a book.
The first time the world ever saw a book, a codex, was when
the Christian preachers cut up those scrolls and bound them in the back, so
they could more felicitously, and easily, turn to the Word of God as they proclaimed
the truth of the Almighty. So Porphyry, seeing that, began to study the Holy
Scriptures on which the Christian based his faith and his message. And
Porphyry, doubtless the most brilliant and scintillating antagonist the
Christian faith ever had—Porphyry wrote fifteen books against the Word of God,
against the Bible. If he could undermine and cut down the foundation upon
which the Christian preacher stood, then he could deny the faith that the
preacher proclaimed.
So devastating was the attack of Porphyry, that he was
answered by Eusebius, the father of church history in Caesarea, and by
Methodius, the brilliant preacher and student in Lycia. Emperor Theodosius, in
335 A.D., destroyed all the books of Porphyry and we know them only through Eusebius
and Methodius. But the attack against the Christian faith in the 200’s A.D. is
but typical of the attack against the Word of God through all the preceding and
succeeding centuries. It never varies: “Yea, hath God said.”
And these who confront us and assail us, these state their
case blatantly. If you have tractors to move mountains, you don't need faith.
If you have penicillin, you don't need prayer. If you have positive thinking,
you don't need salvation. If you have the state, you don't need the church.
If you have an Einstein or an Edison, you don't need a Jesus the Christ. And
if you have manuals of science, you don't need the Bible.
And their avowal of disinterest and destructive approach to
the Word of God is plainly stated on their part. They say you had just as well
preach Jason and the Golden Fleece, as Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden. You
had as well preach Hercules and the twelve tribes, as to preach Moses—Hercules
and the twelve labors, as to preach Moses and the twelve tribes. You had as
well preach Achilles and the Trojan War, as to preach Joshua and the Conquest
of Canaan. They say you had as well preach Aesop's fables, as to preach the
Bible because both are filled with mythological, legendary tales from which you
can conclude morality.
They state, I say, their case openly and blatantly. I
copied this from an eminent theologian. Apologizing for the Bible, this
professor wrote, “Of course there are scientific and historical errors in the
Bible. However, we can excuse such mistakes on the ground that the Bible is
not a textbook of science or history, and therefore, we do not expect it to be
scientifically and historically accurate.” End quote.
All I have to say about that is this. If this Bible, which
is supposed to be written by God, who knows all of history and who knows all
the facts of His creation—if this Bible, which is supposed to be written by the
Lord God, the Holy Spirit of God, is full of historical and scientific errors,
it is a work of men. It is not a work of God, period. It's that plain. But
as I open this Holy Word, I find it is verified, and verifiable, by all that
men know and learn, both in archaeology and in science. Let's look at that
historically for just a moment.
Men have been archaeologically digging up the Holy Land for
centuries and centuries. And to this present day there has never been one
spade of archaeological dirt turned but that confirms the veracity of this Holy
Book. For example, for years and years and years the critics said, “When you,
we, read in the Bible ‘Moses wrote these words,’ that is an historical
anachronism because writing was not known until centuries after Moses.” That's
what they said. Then we discovered the tablets in Tell-Amarna in Egypt and,
then, the Ugaritic cuneiform literature in Ebla, in Ras-Shamra, in Northern
Syria, and in other places. And we learned that writing was a gift of mankind
thousands of years before Moses.
They said, “The Bible speaks about Hittites. All through
the Old Testament, you'll find references to Hittites. There never was a
Hittite,” the destructive critics said. “That's a conjuration of the
imagination of the writer of the Bible.” Then they began to learn and to dig
in those archaeological heaps in Asia Minor and in the Holy Land, and learned
that there was a great empire lost to memory and to history: the Hittite
empire.
They said—and, this was a surefire castigation—“There never
lived anyone by the name of Belshazzar,” who was supposed to have been the last
king of Babylon, when Cyrus destroyed it. There never lived a Belshazzar.
They had a closed and certain case. The cylinder of Cyrus lists all of the
kings of Babylon, but there's no Belshazzar. When Herodotus visited Babylon
seventy years after Cyrus the Persian took it, he never heard of Belshazzar.
The critics said, “This is a sure mistake, historical error, in the Word of
God.” Then they began to dig in the ruins of the heaps of Babylon. And
reading those cuneiform tablets, my brother, I could write a biography today
about Belshazzar.
They said, “It is impossible for the fourth gospel, the
Gospel of John, to have been written by the Apostle in the first century A.D.,
because its theological development would take 250 years to present.” While
they were mouthing that criticism, they dug up from the sands of Egypt a
papyrus, a quotation from the fourth gospel, the Gospel of John, showing that
the gospel must have been written between 90 and 100 A.D., in the lifetime of
the great Apostle. There are no historical errors in the Bible. All that we
know confirms the truth of the Word of God.
What about these scientific errors? Let's be sure that we
are correct in our understanding of scriptural facts. And let us be sure of
our understanding of scientific facts.
There was an unusually gifted and popular lecturer who went
around America until, oh, twenty years ago. And when he'd go to a place, he'd
put a big ad in the newspaper and say, “I'll give anyone a thousand dollars if
they can point out to me a scientific fact, a scientific mistake, in the
Bible.” So a woman came up to him and claimed the one thousand dollars, “For,”
she said, “I have found a scientific mistake in the Bible. It says in the
Bible the Euphrates River ran through the Garden of Eden. It says in the Bible
that Adam and Eve ate an apple, and that's the reason they fell in their
disobedience. And it has been scientifically demonstrated that no apples can
grow in the hot desert of the Mesopotamian Valley. So I want the thousand
dollars.”
Let us be sure of our Scriptural facts. It never hints that
it was an apple that Adam and Eve ate when they transgressed the law of God.
Let's also be very sure of our scientific facts. Science is like a chicken.
It is always molting. It is always changing. What is science today, is
ludicrous yesterday, and will be tomorrow. In the great library of the Louvre,
there are three and one half miles of obsolete scientific books. They've
always been wanting to upgrade the Bible according to the latest scientific
persuasions.
Had we done that at 1000 B.C., had we done it in 500 A.D.,
had we done it in 1500 A.D., had we done it last year, the Bible would be
filled with useless absurdities. Science changes. There is no ultimate
foundation in what we observe. Looking beyond what we see, we can pierce into
the very heart and mind of God. But we have to look beyond what we see.
The Bible has been written by something like forty men, over
1,500 years, and, for 2,000 years, has remained unchanged. Yet you will not
find in the Bible any of those weird, far out, unimaginable backgrounds against
which the Holy Word was written.
For example, it says in the Word of God that Moses was learned
in all the science and wisdom of the Egyptians. Through these archaeological
discoveries, we can read the very scientific text that Moses studied. And the
latest science in Moses' day went like this: They had a cosmogony explaining
the beginning, the birth of the world. And they said it came out of an egg
that went around and around and around and around. And when the day of
hatching came, out was the world. That's where the world came from in the
latest science in the days of Moses.
So I pick up the Bible, and I expect to read something about
that flying ovoid. But instead of reading about that winged ovoid, I read ten
of the greatest, most meaningful words ever penned by human hand: “In the
beginning God created the heavens and the earth.”
So much of the Bible was written against the background of
the Babylonians. They also had a scientific explanation in anthropology and in
cosmogony. This was the latest science in the days of the Babylonian Empire.
There was a chaos monster named Tiamat, and there was a good god of light named
Marduk. And they fought to the death, and Marduk slew Tiamat. And when the
good god Marduk slew Tiamat, he flattened him out, and that was the earth.
Then the latest science of Babylon said, “Marduk spit, and where he spat, men
sprang up.” Then the scientists said, “And where the men spat, women came
up.” Then it says, “The women spat, and where they spat, animals came up.”
And that was the anthropological explanation of what they saw in the human race
in the earth.
When I read that, I thought of a big sign in a warehouse.
And it read, “Don't Smoke. Remember the Chicago Fire.” And, a wag wrote
underneath, “Don't Spit. Remember the Johnstown Flood.” But instead of these
weird, far out, scientific explanations of the centuries past, we find in the
Word of God the most amazing revelations of the truths that we are just now
beginning to understand and to see.
For example, it will say in the twenty-sixth chapter in the
Book of Job that: “God hangeth the world upon nothing.” When that was written,
men everywhere—and, for thousands of years—men everywhere believed that the
earth stood upon some kind of a solid foundation. The Egyptians taught that
the earth was held by four pillars at four corners, with a fifth pillar
underneath, in the middle. Now I can understand how we might crawl to the
corners of the earth and see those four pillars. But I tell you, that fifth
one underneath is sheer speculation.
There's not a boy that goes to school, but that knows that
the Greeks were taught that the world is held on the back of a giant named
Atlas. And the Hindus said—in their cosmogony, the Hindus said that the earth
is balanced on the back of a giant elephant, who stands on the back of a great
turtle, that swims in a cosmic sea. That is the explanation of the earth,
according to all the scientific knowledge of mankind for thousands and
thousands of years. And yet, the Bible said that: “God hangeth the world upon
nothing.” It is held in the hands of the Almighty as it swings in its giant
orbit around the earth. God did that—by inspiration said that to us.
Look again. It was thousands of years that the earth had no
idea that the wind had weight. But, in 1643, in 1643, Torricelli, who was the
assistant to Galileo invented, discovered the barometer and learned that
atmosphere, wind, has weight and can be measured by a barometer—1643. But
thousands of years before that, in the twentieth chapter of the Book of Job, he
refers to the weight of the wind. God did that. God said that. God knew
that.
Take again: for thousands of years, men believed that the
earth was flat and that it was square and that it had corners. But in the
fortieth chapter of the Book of Isaiah, the great prophet describes the
Almighty God who “sits above the circle of the earth,” the round of the earth.
Thousands of years before men knew that the earth was round, God said that it
was a circle, that it had roundness in it. That's the inspiration of the Lord
God. He knew it all, and He wrote it in His Book.
The moon; the Bible presents the moon as a reflection to
cast light upon the earth in the day, in the nighttime, in the dark time. And
the United States said we are going to send a man to the moon to find out
what's on the moon. And when our astronauts began walking around on the moon,
to look what was there on the moon, they saw that the sand was like beads. The
sand was like beads.
We learned, in chemical analyses, that the most prolific of
all of the chemicals there is titanium. And there's no atmosphere. And it's
rough and corrugated. When you look at that, those sands reflect light. The
titanium reflects light. There's no atmosphere to keep from the reflection of
the light. And it's corrugated like the glass on the front of your lamp on
your automobile. In other words, the moon is just one great, giant reflector.
Now had the United States government asked me, I could have saved them six
billion dollars had they just asked me about it. I could have done it from the
Bible.
You'll not find in literature—no matter what scientific
writing you read—you'll not find in literature a more astute and conclusive
description of the atomic molecular structure of the world than in the eleventh
chapter of the Book of Hebrews, in the third verse. We could go on and on and
on. From beginning to end, God who knew all history and all time; and God who
made this universe from the microcosm to the macrocosm; God who wrote that
Book, wrote it all down according to the truth of the omniscient, infallible
mind of the Almighty Lord. And when I read it, every syllable of it is truth.
It is God's Word and there are no errors and no mistakes in it. Whether it's
history, or whether it's science; whether it's psychology, whether it's
sociology; whatever the student may give his heart and mind and life to, he
will find the truth of God in these sacred and holy pages.
But I would be the first to recognize, and you would too,
that the Bible is not written, as such, as a book of history or, as such, a
textbook on science. The Bible was written from the hand of God in the heart,
compassionate and loving, of the Lord, that we might be saved, that we might go
to heaven when we die, that we might live in a beautiful and Christian
fellowship here, like God's family, in this present world, both here and in the
world to come, to have God with us: The revealed Word of the Lord.
You had Pat Zondervan recognized just a moment ago. For
thirty five consecutive years, he has come to this pulpit to make appeal for
the Gideons. One year, in the days of the Vietnam tragedy, one year he stood
here and, as he was making appeal for our people to support the distribution of
the Word of God in the earth, he held up a little New Testament. And when he
held it up, from where I was seated, I could see the marks of those bullets
that had gone through that little Bible.
Pat said that it was taken from the body of an American
soldier boy from Georgia. And those bullets that had grazed through that
little New Testament had gone through his heart. The boy had died in Vietnam,
and a chaplain had taken the little Bible from his body, and in the course of
time, had given it to Mr. Zondervan.
Mr. Zondervan, of course, held it up and said, “I wish it
had been my 35 cents that had bought that Bible for that boy.” Well, when he
sat down, I said, “Mr. Zondervan, would you put that little book in my hand?”
And he placed it in my hand right there, and I looked through it. And when I
came to the back page, that Georgia boy had written on the back page, “This
day”—and, he dated it—“I”—and, he called his name—“Wilson Thomas, take Jesus
Christ for my personal Savior.” That is the purpose of the Word of God, that
we might know the Lord and that we might be saved.
When Sir Walter Scott, the incomparable Scottish bard, lay
dying, he said to his son-in-law, Lockhart, “Son, bring me the Book.” And
Lockhart said to his father-in-law, “Father, out of these thousands of books in
your library, what book?” And Sir Walter Scott said, “My son, there is just
one Book. Bring me the Book.” And Lockhart brought to Sir Walter Scott the Bible.
And the Scottish bard died with that book in his hand. “There is just one
Book,” cried the dying sage.
Read me the old,
old story
And the winged
words
That can never
fail,
Wafted his soul to
glory.
There's just one Book! And to preach it, and to believe it,
and to accept it, and to follow it, and to love it, and to proclaim it is the
grandest, greatest privilege God hath given us in human life. This is the Book
that tells us about our Lord. This is the Book that speaks of His resurrection
from the dead. This is the Book that tells us of His session in heaven. This
is the Book that promises us that He's coming again. This is the Book that
gives us hope for whatever the providences, exigencies of life may unfold
before us. This is the Book upon which we can stand as a preacher, as a
church, as a missionary, as a soul, as one dying, as one looking forward to
meeting our blessed Lord in some upper and better world.
And that is our invitation to you. If you're in one of
these chapels, there's time and to spare to come. If you're down beneath this
auditorium, if you're in Coleman Hall, if you're out on Kadane Plaza, anywhere,
there is time and to spare. In a moment, I'm going to pray. And while I pray,
the orchestra will find a place to either side. And, we're all going to ask
God to bless the appeal together. Then we'll stand and sing a hymn of
invitation.
And while we sing that song of appeal, to give your life to
the Lord Jesus, “I accept Him as my personal Savior, to come into the
fellowship of this dear family of God,” our church. To answer some call in
your heart, “God hath spoken to me today, and I'm answering with my life.” In
a moment, when we stand and sing this appeal, may angels attend you as you
come.
I just learned that Zig Ziglar has his annual meeting of the
people who guide his great corporation here today. And when they come, every
year, Zig stands there, and we have a wonderful prayer of consecration. Zig
said to me, “I think, in the great throng that's here today, it may be
impossible for them to be together.”
But he's going to stand right there. And if you are in Zig
Ziglar's company, this is the sweetest day in the world to come and to
reconsecrate and rededicate and regive your heart and life to the blessed Lord
Jesus. You will be a better salesman. You will be a better father. You will
be a better husband. You will be a better somebody you for giving your heart
anew to the Lord. And for all of us, as the Spirit of God shall press the
appeal to our hearts, “This is God's day for me, and I'm answering with my
life.”
Now may we pray: Our Lord, what a wonderful thing. The
Bible is called the Word of God. The written voice of God is called the Word
of God. The Lord Jesus Christ is called the Word of God. All three of them
are the Word of God: The living Word, the spoken Word, the written Word and how
marvelous that we can know it. We can know the Word of God in our souls. We
can know the Word of God reading in His sacred and infallible Word. And we can
hear the voice of the Word of God in our hearts. Blessed be the name of the
Lord who hath thus revealed Him so marvelously and plainly to us. Now Lord,
confirm this message today. May God seal His approval of the truth we've tried
to preach by adding to the word souls saved, and these who are coming into the
family of Jesus, and these who are reconsecrating their lives to the Lord. Do
it, Lord, and let our eyes look upon it and let our hearts rejoice in it. And with
those in the presence of the angels of God, we shall love Thee forever, for
everyone who turns to Thee and to us. Humbly we ask and pray, in Thy dear and
saving name, Amen.
Now Zig, you come and stand right there. And in a moment,
we're going to sing. All right, Zig says those that attended his class this
morning, if you would like to come and to reconsecrate and regive your life to
the Lord Jesus you come shake his hand and you can go back to your seat. The
rest of them who come to give their hearts to the Lord or to be baptized or to
come into the church or to dedicate themselves we want you to come and to kneel
here have a prayer with us. As God shall lead and as the Spirit of God shall
press the appeal to your heart, come and a thousand times welcome while we
stand and while we sing.