The
Real Problems
The
great detective looked at his friend Watson.
"
Circumstantial evidence is a very tricky thing; it may seem
to point very straight to one thing, but if you shift your
own point of view a little, you may find it pointing in an
equally uncompromising manner to something entirely different."1
Sherlock
Holmes was right. Circumstantial evidence really is a tricky
thing. So much depends on the way you look at it.
Many
millions of people regard the circumstantial evidence against
the Bible as damning. But almost all of them have taken a
very one-sided view of it.
In
this book I have tried to look at this evidence from another
point of view. You know now-perhaps for the first time-nearly
all the things that can be said against the Bible. But does
the Bible appear any the worse for this?
You
will remember how, in Part One, we saw a great deal of positive
evidence that the Bible is a superhuman book. That evidence
has never been properly answered by the Bibles enemies. They
may try to shrug it off, but they cannot dispose of it.
Thus
we started Part Two in a position of strength. We knew of
many good reasons to believe that the Bible is true. We were
going to keep those in the backs of our minds as we started
to look at the case against the Bible.
In
Chapter 12 we noted that difficulties were bound to exist.
There are unsolved problems in every area of human knowledge.
We can hardly expect the Word of the Almighty to be so simple
that every question can be answered.
Chapter
13 debunked those twentieth-century idols, the Experts. We
cannot do without experts; our modern civilisation depends
upon them. (I earn my own living as a specialist in one narrow
field of science and technology.) Experts are usually right
on questions of fact. But they are often hopelessly wrong
in their opinions. And yet they have somehow managed to bluff
the general public into accepting their opinions as practically
unquestionable.
Chapter
14 showed that there can be no half measures about the Bible.
It claims to contain the very words of God. We cannot water
down this claim and accept only the bits we like. There are
overwhelming reasons for accepting the whole Bible as an inspired
message from the Lord.
We
saw the disastrous effects of trying to compromise, in Chapter
15. First you reject just a little here and a little there.
Gradually you whittle away at the Bible until you have nothing
left. Then comes the moral landslide. The present sorry state
of our "Christian civilisation" is the direct result
of its leaders glib rejection of the Bible.
In
Chapter 16 we looked at the question of authorship. Some scholars
consider that the Old Testament was written by the men whose
names it bears. But many other scholars disagree. We looked
at the reasons for both points of view, and found that modern
criticisms of the Old Testament are based more on guesswork
than on facts. In the New Testament we saw that there was
a far greater supply of solid evidence; and this evidence
strongly favours the traditional views about the authors of
the New Testament.
Chapter
17 told the astonishing story of how the Bible has come down
to us, across a gap of nineteen centuries or more. We saw
strong evidence for the Bibles claim that each book was recognised
as "Scripture" as soon as it was written, and for
ever after was preserved as such. We marvelled at the accuracy
of the ancient scribes who copied it by hand. We admired the
efforts of hundreds of scholars to give us the best possible
translation into our mother tongue. And we saw that there
is no need to worry about the problem of interpretation
-so
long as we are prepared to read the Bible for ourselves.
We
saw in Chapter 18 that the Bible as a history book is second
to none. Again and again new finds by archaeologists have
proved it right, where once it was accused of being wrong.
We saw that there is no real reason to reject its claim to
be absolutely right, always.
So-called
contradictions in the Bible were examined in Chapter 19. We
saw that everyday life is full of things that look like contradictions,
but which, when you know all the facts, are nothing of the
kind. We found reassuring evidence that no real contradictions
have ever been proved to exist in the Bible.
In
Chapter 20 we looked at the slanderous things that are said
about the Bible. We saw that it was neither indecent, nor
bloodthirsty, nor unreliable, nor unfair-but just misrepresented
by its critics.
Chapter
21 was the first of a series of chapters about the
impact of modern science. We saw that it was more logical
to believe in the miracle stories of the Bible than to reject
them. And we saw that scientists themselves cant explain the
existence of the universe with-out talking of "creation".
Then
we saw in Chapter 22 that it takes more faith to believe that
evolution could have occurred without a Creative Power behind
it than to believe the Book of Genesis.
Chapter
23 showed that the shakiest part of this shaky theory is that
which deals with the evolution of man. We saw that Adam and
Eve were real people; that they were specially created by
God as the ancestors of the whole human race; and that we
are not told how long ago they lived. We saw no clash between
Bible-believing Christianity and anthropology-once the misconceptions
on both sides were stripped away.
Finally,
in Chapter 24 we saw that the existence of suffering is no
reason for disbelief. Far from it: the Bibles own explanation
of the reason for suffering is so convincing that it provides
another powerful reason for belief
Then
Why Do Men Disbelieve?
We
have looked at the evidence on both sides.
We
saw that the evidence for a God-given Bible is impressive.
We saw that the evidence against the Bible is nothing like
as weighty as its opponents suppose.
And
yet most people disbelieve.
Why?
Have
they weighed the evidence, and found it wanting? Or is there
some other reason?
Yes,
there is. There are several other reasons, in fact. It is
not difficult to recognise the following six factors as the
major causes of twentieth-century unbelief.
(1)
Sensitivity
Once
I was involved in a minor car accident. It was all my own
fault. I said as much to the panel beater who was straightening
out my dented wing.
"Lumme,
guvnor," he said, "youre the first bloke whats been
in here this year who hasnt been in the right!"
I
could well believe him. Motorists never like to admit that
they are in the wrong. But motorists are not a special class
of people. They are just ordinary human beings. And the sad
fact is that none of us likes to be told off; we all hate
facing up to our shortcomings. Hence the unpopularity of the
Bible, which tells us fairly and squarely what God thinks
of the way we behave.
A
missionary once gave a Bible to an educated native. A few
weeks later he asked him how he had enjoyed reading it.
"I
didnt like it at all," replied the native. "That
book knows too much about me! It is like a second conscience."
The
truth often hurts. The things that the Bible tells us about
ourselves are particularly painful. To admit that they are
true is as unpleasant as admitting that the other fellow in
a road accident was in the right. Our natural instinct is
to defend ourselves against the Bibles criticisms. And the
easiest way to do this is by convincing ourselves that the
Bible is not true.
(2)
Prosperity
In
1969 Mr. Charles Holme moved away from an old farmhouse
in Staffordshire to a smart new bungalow. When he moved he
disposed of some of his furniture, including an old painting
that had once belonged to his father. He thought it was a
dull old picture that wouldnt suit his bright new home. So
he accepted £4 for it.
Two
years later he had the shock of his life, when he recognised
the picture on a TV programme. Someone had spotted it in a
London junk shop and identified it as a genuine Van Gogh.
It had just fetched £46,000 at a sale in New York.2
Poor
Mr. Holme! He had so many attractive things in his new bungalow
that he had no room for a "dull old picture". And
so he lost a fortune which passed to someone else.
We
must not laugh at Mr. Holmes misfortune. His story is a parable
of our time. We have all been spoilt by the abundance of nice
bright things in our lives. We have been so dazzled by them
that we cannot recognise true riches when we see them. We
have no room for a "dull old book" in our way of
life. So like Mr. Holme, and like the Biblical character Esau,3
we settle for short-term happines-and miss the opportunity
of untold riches.
(3)
Security
Bibles
are scarcer than diamonds in Russia today. A friend of mine
has a young son who tried to smuggle a load of Russian Bibles
to a church in Leningrad. Unfortunately his suitcase was searched
at the Russian customs, and his precious cargo was discovered.
The Bibles were confiscated while he was fined heavily and
deported. Undeterred, he asked his accusers a searching question:
"Why
are you making such a fuss? Why should the mighty Soviet Union
be afraid of this little book?"
He
was not surprised that they ignored his query. But he knew
the answer. Bible-believing Christians do not make enthusiastic
supporters of Russias atheistic rulers. So the men in the
Kremlin regard the Bible as a threat to their security, and
suppress it.
Although
we may not realise it, many of us feel the same way about
the Bible, deep down. If we were to let the Bible rule in
our hearts, most of us would have to change our whole way
of life. We cannot tolerate such a threat to our peace of
mind. We want to remain securely entrenched in our present
way of living. So we suppress the Bible in the only way open
to us-by convincing ourselves that it is untrue.
(4)
Conformity
Through
an administrative mistake a perfectly healthy little boy was
sent to a school for handicapped children. As the one normal
boy in a crowd of cripples he felt dreadfully uncomfortable.
But within a week he had solved his problem. He taught himself
to walk with a very convincing limp. Nothing would convince
him that his healthy condition was "right", and
that of everybody else was "wrong".
The
desire to conform is deep-rooted in every one of us. Jellyfish
always go along with the tide; it takes a fish with a backbone
to swim against it. The argument, "But hardly anybody
believes that sort of stuff today!" has no logical force
at all. Yet psychologically it is tremendously powerful.
There
is only one way to resist that sort of argument. Remember
that all through history men have been led astray by it. Within
living memory hardly anybody believed that it would ever be
possible for man to travel faster than sound. An early nineteenth-century
professor, Dionysius Lardner, told the Dublin Royal Society
that "men might as well expect to walk on the moon as
cross the North Atlantic in one of those steamboats!"
The world agreed with him. Hardly anybody thought that man
would ever do either.
On
the day that Jesus Christ was crucified, hardly anybody thought
that the world would ever hear any more of Him. Most people
thought He was finished. How wrong they were!
Yet
human beings go on reacting in the same old way. Most people
reject the Bible just because most other people reject the
Bible, and they cant bear to be different.
(5)
Obstinacy
The
practical psychologist, Dale Carnegie, used to say that the
only way to win an argument was to avoid it. This is only
a slight overstatement of the truth. When a man once gets
deeply involved in an argument, he is likely to stick to his
guns whatever happens. His emotions become stirred, and after
that no amount of logical evidence will move him. "I
jolly well wont give in!" he says to himself, in effect.
The
behaviour of a man called Hiel is typical of this attitude.
The story begins some thirteen or fourteen centuries before
Christ, when Joshua destroyed the city of Jericho. He forbade
anyone to rebuild it, and prophesied what would happen if
anyone disobeyed:
"
May the Lords curse light on the man who comes forward to
rebuild this city of Jericho. The laying of its foundations
shall cost him his eldest son; the setting up of its gates
shall cost him his youngest."4
About
500 years went by. The Bible and the archaeological record
agree that during that period Jericho lay desolate. Then along
came friend Hiel. Like so many of the people around us today,
he appeared to have no fear of Bible prophecy coming true.
He determined to rebuild Jericho.
He
laid the foundations of the city-and his eldest son, Abiram,
died. It is tempting to imagine what his wife might have said
to him.
"You
fool! You have defied the Scripture, and Abiram is dead. Let
that be a lesson to you. Stop this crazy plan before the second
part of the prophecy is fulfilled, and our other son dies."
But
Hiel took no notice. Perhaps he regarded his first sons death
as a coincidence. Anyway, he pressed on obstinately and at
last set the gates of the city in their place. And then his
second son died.5 A tearful Mrs. Hiel had every justification
for saying, "I told you so!"
Millions
of unbelievers today act just like Hiel. They brush aside
the evidence of prophecy already fulfilled, and stride on
regardless of the Bibles warnings about the future. Christ
commented that they will go on pursuing their own ways, right
up to the day when He returns to fulfil the remaining prophecies
of the Bible.6 As with Hiel, their obstinate refusal to face
the facts will be their undoing.
(6)
The Way We Are Made
This
is the greatest reason of all. In a way it embraces all the
other reasons. Human nature has a natural rebelliousness about
it, a kind of built-in opposition to everything that comes
from God. He did not create us that way; we have become like
it of ourselves.7 The result is, in the words of Paul:
"
The desires of the flesh ["flesh" is Pauls word for what
we call "human nature"] are against the Spirit, and the
desires of the Spirit are against the flesh; for these are
opposed to each other, to prevent you doing what you would."8
This
inborn perversity of human nature has operated all through
history. It caused the ancient Israelites to turn against
Moses, even though he had just delivered them from a life
of slavery in Egypt.9 It caused their descendants to disregard
the words of the prophets, and persecute them. 10 It caused
the Jews of the first century to crucify their King. And it
is at the root of mens unreasonable attitude to the Bible,
all through history.
Up
To Us
Thus
God gives us a word of advice. Because of the way we are made,
it is difficult for us to be fair to the Bible. Recognising
this fact is half the battle. If we once determine to give
the Bible a fair chance, despite our instinctive dislike for
it, we shall soon begin to see it in a very different light.
For
one thing, the opinions of the unbelievers around us will
gradually come to seem less important. We shall begin to recognise
them for the blind expressions of prejudice that they are.
The objections men raise against the Bible will look less
and less weighty. And we shall find ourselves discovering
more and more positive evidence that the Bible is true.
Part
One of this book ended with a suggested prayer from Marks
Gospel, for you to pray as you studied the Bible: "Lord
I (want to) believe; help Thou mine unbelief!"
Now
is a good time to add to this a second prayer, drawn from
Lukes Gospel: "God, be merciful to me, a sinner."11
This
can be your way of recognising where you really stand. We
are not in a position to set ourselves up as judges of the
Bible. On the contrary, the Bible is going to judge us, one
day.12
So
we need to continue our studies with this sort of feeling
in our hearts:
"Oh,
Lord, I am beginning to see why the Bible always looked wrong.
It was because there was something wrong with me. It was as
if I had always looked at it through dirty, half-closed eyelashes.
Now I want to look at it fairly and squarely-even though I
know it is going to be painful to do so. I want to give the
Bible a fair hearing, at last. Help me, Lord."
To
give the Bible a fair hearing. Yes, of course, thats what
we need to do. But how do we set about it?
Part
Three will point the way.
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