Can We Trust the Bible? It Depends on What You Expect
This question—Can we trust the Bible?—is asked often. But before answering it, we must first ask: Trust it for what?
You cannot trust the Bible to teach astronomy. It is not a science textbook. You also cannot trust the Bible to teach you how to bake a cake, cook butter chicken, or design a house.
It is not a cookbook or a manual on engineering. That would be like asking a microscope to tell you the weather. You are simply using the wrong tool for the wrong job.
If that is what you are looking for, then you will be disappointed.
So what can you trust the Bible for?
You can trust the Bible to guide you toward peace, truth, and eternal life. If everyone on earth followed just the Ten Commandments (Exod 20:1–17), or lived out the words of Jesus—Love God and love your neighbor as yourself (Matt 22:37–40)—there would be no war, no exploitation, no hatred, and no injustice. That alone should make you stop and think.
You can also trust the Bible to reveal the nature of God, expose the human condition, and point to the only hope humanity has—Jesus Christ. The entire Bible, from beginning to end, is centered on this one person who offers what no one else can: forgiveness of sins and eternal life.
No other book tells the truth about who we are, why we are broken, and how we can be made whole. No other book introduces us to the one who not only died for us, but rose again to lead us into eternal life.
Yes, you can trust the Bible. Not to tell you how to make a pizza—but to show you how to make sense of your life, your soul, and your future.
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