The Bible's Unique Teachings
II Timothy 3:16,17
THE BIBLE makes it very clear in
II Timothy 3:16:
All scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine,
for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness.
That the Bible is Divinely inspired cannot be overestimated. This is the
strategic center of Christian theology, and must be defended at all costs.
It is the point at which our satanic enemy is constantly hurling his hellish
battalions. Here it was the devil made his first attack. In Eden he
asked, "Yea, hath God said?" and today he is pursuing the same
tactics.
But there is no doubt that the Bible is the Word of God. It stands on an
infinitely exalted plane, immeasurably transcending all the greatest productions
of human genius by its unique credentials. All its internal marks prove it
to be the handiwork of God. There is uniqueness in all its teachings.
The Bible is unique in its teaching about God, of course. Only from the
Scripture can one learn about God’s Omnipotence, Omniscience, Omnipresence,
Eternal existence, Infinite Wisdom, Sovereignty, Holiness, Justice, Mercy, and
Grace. But the divine nature of the Bible is reflected also in the uniqueness of
its other teachings:
About Man. Unlike all other books in the
world, the Bible condemns, all his doings. It never eulogizes his wisdom, nor
praises his achievements. On the contrary, it declares, "every man at
his best state is altogether vanity" (Psa. 39:5). And instead of
telling man that he is a noble character, it says that all his righteousnesses
are as "filthy rags", that he is a lost sinner deserving of hell.
The picture that the Scriptures give of man is deeply humiliating and entirely
different from all, which are drawn by human pencils. The word of God
describes the state of the natural man in the following language:
There is none righteous, no, not one: There is none that
understandeth; there is none that seeketh after God. They are all gone
out of the way, they are together become unprofitable; there is none that
doeth good, no, not one (Rom. 3:10-12).
Instead of making Satan the source of all the sins of which
we are guilty, the Bible declared in mark 7:21-23:
For from within, out of the heart of men, proceed evil thoughts, adulteries,
fornications, murders, thefts, covetousness, wickedness, deceit, lasciviousness,
an evil eye, blasphemy, pride, foolishness: All these evil things come from
within, and defile the man.
Such a conception of man-so different from man’s own ideas, and so humiliating
to his proud heart-never could have come from man himself.
About sin. Man regards sin as a misfortune
and ever seeks to minimize its enormity. In these days, sin is referred to
as ignorance, as a necessary stage in a man’s development. Others look
upon sin upon by a mere negation, the opposite of good.
But the Bible, unlike every other book, strips man of all his excuses and
declares that "sin is the transgression of the law (I John 3:4), that
"sin is very grievous" (Gen. 18:20), and that our sins provoke God to
anger (I Kings 16:2). It speaks of "deceitfulness of sin" (Heb.
3:13) and insists that all sin is sin against God (Psalm 51:4) and against
Christ (I Cor. 8:12).
Did man ever write such an indictment against himself? What human mind
ever invented such a description of sin as that discovered in the Bible?
Whoever would have imagined that sin was such a vile and dreadful thing in the
site of God that nothing but the precious blood of His own beloved Son could
make atonement for it!
About the punishment. A defective view of sin necessarily leads to
an inadequate conception of what is due sin. Minimize the gravity and
enormity of sin and you most proportionately reduce the sentence that it
deserves.
Many are crying out today against the justice of the eternal punishment of sin.
They complain that the penalty does not fit the crime. They argue that it
is unrighteousness for a sinner to suffer eternally in consequence of a short
life span of wrongdoing.
In lands where there exists any belief in a future life, it is held that at
death the wicked either pass through some temporary suffering for remedial and
purifying purposes, or they are simply annihilated. Even in Christendom,
where the Word of God had until recently held a prominent and public place for
centuries, the great bulk of people do not believe in eternal punishment.
They argue that God in too merciful and kind to ban one of His own creatures to
endless misery.
But even in this world it is not the length of time it takes to commit the crime
that determines the severity of the sentence. Many a man has suffered a
life term of imprisonment for a crime taking only a few minutes to perpetrate.
About Hell. But the teachings of God’s word upon eternal
punishment are as clear and explicit as they are awful. They declare that
the doom of the Christ rejecter is a conscious, never ending, indescribable
torment. The bible depicts hell as a realm where "the worm dieth
not" and "the fire is not quenched" (Mark 9:48). It speaks
of it as a lake of fire and brimstone (Rev. 20:10), where even a drop of water
is denied the agonized sufferer (Luke 16:24).
It declares that "the smoke of their torment ascendeth up forever and ever:
and they have no rest day nor night" (Rev. 14:11). It represents the
world of the lost as "the blackness of darkness forever" (Jude 13).
Such a conception is too repugnant and repulsive to the human heart to have had
its birth on the earth.
About Salvation. Man’s thoughts about salvation,
like every other subject that engages his mind, are defective and deficient.
Hence the force of the admonition "Let the wicked forsake his way, and the
unrighteous man his thoughts" (Isa. 55:7.
In the first place, left to himself, man fails to realize his need of salvation.
In the pride of his heart he imagines that he is sufficient in himself, and
through the darkening of his understanding by sin, he fails to comprehend his
ruined and lost condition. It is not until the Holy Spirit deals with him
that man is constrained to cry, "God be merciful to me a sinner."
Secondly, man is ignorant of the way of salvation. Even when man
recognizes that if he died in his present state, he would be punished, he has no
right conception of the remedy. Being ignorant of God’s righteousness he
goes about to establish his own way to be right with God. He supposes that
he must make some personal reparation for his past wrongdoings, that he does
something to merit the esteem of God. The proof of this is to be seen is
the fact that even when pardon and life are presented as a free gift, the
universal tendency, at first, is to regard it as being "too good to be
true."
Yet, such is the plain teaching of God’s word, "For by grace are ye saved
through faith; and that not of yourselves: it is the gift of God: Not of works,
lest any man should boast" (Eph. 2:8,9). And again, "Not by
works of unrighteousness which we have done, but according to his mercy he saved
us" (Titus 3:5).
About God’s way. Who would have thought that the Maker and Ruler
of the universe should lay hold of poor fallen depraved men and women and
lifting them out of the miry clay should make them His own sons and daughters,
and should seat them at His own table. Who would have ever suggested that
those who deserve naught but everlasting shame and contempt, should be made
"heirs of God, and joint heirs with Christ" Who would have dared to
affirm that one day we shall be "made like Christ" and "be
forever with the Lord".
Such concepts were as far beyond the reach of the highest human intellect as
they were of the rudest savage.
But as it is written, Eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, neither have entered
into the heart of man, the things which God hath prepared for them that love
him. But God hath revealed them unto us by his Spirit: for the Spirit
searcheth all things, yea, the deep things of God. (I Cor. 2:9,10).
Again we ask, what human intellect could have devised a means whereby God could
be just and yet merciful, and also merciful and yet just? What mortal mind
would ever have dreamed of a free and full salvation, bestowed on hell-deserving
sinners, "without money and without price"?
About the Savior. The description that the Scriptures furnish of
the person, the character, and the work of the Lord Jesus Christ is without
anything that approaches a parallel in the whole real, of literature.
It is easier to suppose that man could create a world than to believe he
invented the character of our Redeemer. Given a piece of machinery that is
delicate, complex, exact in all its movements, and we know it must be the
product of a competent mechanic. Given a work of art that is beautiful,
symmetrical, and original we know it must be the product of a master artist.
Likewise, none but the Holy Spirit could have produced the peerless portrait of
the Lord Jesus that we find in the Gospels.
In Christ, all Excellencies combine, every grace is found. In Him,
moreover, all these perfections were properly poised and balanced. He was
meek yet regal; He was gentle yet fearless; He was compassionate yet just; He
was submissive yet authoritative; He was divine yet human. Add to these,
the fact that He was absolutely "without sin" and His uniqueness
becomes apparent. Nowhere in all the writings of antiquity is there to be
found the presentation of such a peerless and wonderful maker.
Moreover, who would have dared to imagine the Creator and upholder of the
Universe taking upon Himself the form of a servant and being made in the
likeness of men? Who would have conceived the idea of the Lord of Glory
being born in a manger, the object of angelic worship becoming so poor that He
had nowhere to lay His head? Who would have declared that the one before
whom the Seraphim veil their faces should permit the creatures of His hand to
scourge and buffet Him and be led as a lamb to the slaughter? Whoever
would have conceived of Emmanuel becoming obedient unto death, even the death of
the cross!
Summary. Here then is an argument that the simplest can grasp.
The Scriptures contain their own evidence that they are Divinely inspired. Every
page of Holy Writ is stamped with Jehovah’s autograph. The uniqueness of
its teachings demonstrates that the Bible is not the product of any man or any
number of men, but is in truth a revelation from God.
by Arthur W. Pink