The Authority of Scripture: Divine Inspiration Explained
Devotional
Day 1: Scripture as Divine Revelation
Scripture is a unique revelation from God, distinct from human philosophies and ideologies. It provides answers to life's profound questions that are beyond human capacity, emphasizing its divine origin and authority. Unlike human attempts to understand existence through mythology, philosophy, or science, Scripture offers insights that are alien to us, coming directly from God. This divine origin sets Scripture apart as a unique and authoritative source of truth, providing guidance and wisdom that surpass human understanding. [06:37]
"For my thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways my ways, declares the Lord. For as the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my ways higher than your ways and my thoughts than your thoughts." (Isaiah 55:8-9, ESV)
Reflection: Consider a question or challenge in your life that seems beyond your understanding. How can you seek God's wisdom through Scripture to find guidance?
Day 2: The Challenge of Modernity
In the modern age, the authority of Scripture is often challenged by the emphasis on human autonomy, rationality, and scientific progress. Figures like Joseph Henry Thayer and movements such as higher criticism have questioned the divine inspiration of the Bible, suggesting it is a human creation rather than a divine revelation. However, the doctrine of inspiration asserts that Scripture is both a divine and human book, maintaining its relevance and authority. This dual nature of Scripture requires a balanced understanding, recognizing its divine inspiration while acknowledging its human authorship. [12:48]
"See to it that no one takes you captive by philosophy and empty deceit, according to human tradition, according to the elemental spirits of the world, and not according to Christ." (Colossians 2:8, ESV)
Reflection: In what ways have modern ideas or philosophies influenced your view of Scripture? How can you reaffirm your commitment to its divine authority today?
Day 3: Balancing Divine and Human Aspects
Understanding Scripture requires recognizing its dual nature as both divine and human. It is a divine book sourced in God, yet written by human authors in common languages, reflecting their personalities and contexts. This harmonious blend of divine truth communicated through human authors is crucial as we approach Scripture, recognizing it as the authoritative Word of God that speaks to every aspect of life. By acknowledging both aspects, we can appreciate the richness and depth of Scripture, allowing it to guide and shape our understanding of life and faith. [15:01]
"For no prophecy was ever produced by the will of man, but men spoke from God as they were carried along by the Holy Spirit." (2 Peter 1:21, ESV)
Reflection: How can you better appreciate the human and divine aspects of Scripture in your daily reading and study?
Day 4: The Role of Inspiration
The doctrine of inspiration emphasizes that Scripture is not merely a human creation but a divine revelation. It is the very words of God, inspired and carried along by the Holy Spirit, providing a reliable and authoritative source of truth. This understanding of inspiration is essential for recognizing the authority of Scripture and its role in guiding our lives. By acknowledging the divine inspiration of Scripture, we can trust its teachings and allow it to shape our beliefs and actions. [17:48]
"All Scripture is breathed out by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness." (2 Timothy 3:16, ESV)
Reflection: Reflect on a time when Scripture has provided guidance or correction in your life. How can you continue to rely on its inspired truth?
Day 5: Commitment to Scripture's Authority
Approaching Scripture requires a commitment to its authority as the Word of God. This involves recognizing its divine inspiration and allowing it to guide and shape our understanding of life and faith. By committing to the authority of Scripture, we open ourselves to its transformative power, allowing it to influence our thoughts, actions, and decisions. This commitment is essential for growing in our relationship with God and living a life that reflects His truth and love. [20:23]
"Your word is a lamp to my feet and a light to my path." (Psalm 119:105, ESV)
Reflection: What steps can you take today to deepen your commitment to the authority of Scripture in your life? How can you allow it to guide your decisions and actions?
Sermon Summary
In our exploration of the authority of revelation, we delve into the doctrine of inspiration, a foundational concept that asserts Scripture as the divinely breathed Word of God. This doctrine, rooted in 2 Timothy 3:16, emphasizes that all Scripture is inspired by God and is profitable for teaching, reproof, correction, and training in righteousness. The essence of inspiration is that Scripture is a top-down revelation, distinguishing it from human philosophies and ideologies that attempt to answer life's profound questions from a bottom-up perspective.
Throughout history, humanity has sought answers to existential questions through various means—mythology, philosophy, and science. However, these approaches often fall short because they rely on human reasoning and understanding. In contrast, Scripture provides answers that are alien to us, coming from beyond our human capacity, directly from God. This divine origin sets Scripture apart as a unique and authoritative source of truth.
The modern age, with its emphasis on human autonomy, rationality, and scientific progress, has often challenged the authority of Scripture. Figures like Joseph Henry Thayer and movements such as higher criticism have questioned the divine inspiration of the Bible, suggesting it is a human creation rather than a divine revelation. Yet, the doctrine of inspiration maintains that while Scripture is indeed a human book, written in common languages and reflecting the personalities of its authors, it is fundamentally a divine book, sourced in God and carried along by the Holy Spirit.
This dual nature of Scripture as both divine and human requires a balanced understanding. It is not merely a collection of human insights or a mystical text dictated by God. Instead, it is a harmonious blend of divine truth communicated through human authors. This understanding is crucial as we approach Scripture, recognizing it as the authoritative Word of God that speaks to every aspect of life.
Key Takeaways
1. Scripture as Divine Revelation: Scripture is a top-down revelation from God, distinct from human philosophies and ideologies. It provides answers to life's profound questions that are beyond human capacity, emphasizing its divine origin and authority. [06:37]
2. The Challenge of Modernity: The modern age, with its focus on human autonomy and scientific progress, often challenges the authority of Scripture. Yet, the doctrine of inspiration asserts that Scripture is both a divine and human book, maintaining its relevance and authority. [12:48]
3. Balancing Divine and Human Aspects: Understanding Scripture requires recognizing its dual nature as both divine and human. It is a divine book sourced in God, yet written by human authors in common languages, reflecting their personalities and contexts. [15:01]
4. The Role of Inspiration: The doctrine of inspiration emphasizes that Scripture is not merely a human creation but a divine revelation. It is the very words of God, inspired and carried along by the Holy Spirit, providing a reliable and authoritative source of truth. [17:48]
5. Commitment to Scripture's Authority: Approaching Scripture requires a commitment to its authority as the Word of God. This involves recognizing its divine inspiration and allowing it to guide and shape our understanding of life and faith. [20:23]
Bible Reading: - 2 Timothy 3:16-17 - 2 Peter 1:20-21
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Observation Questions:
According to 2 Timothy 3:16, what are the purposes of Scripture being "breathed out by God"? How does this relate to the concept of inspiration discussed in the sermon? [00:53]
In the sermon, how is the authority of Scripture contrasted with human philosophies and ideologies? [01:30]
What historical shifts in authority were mentioned in the sermon, and how did they impact the perception of Scripture's authority? [03:12]
How does 2 Peter 1:21 describe the process of prophecy and its divine origin? How does this support the sermon’s message about the dual nature of Scripture? [17:17]
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Interpretation Questions:
The sermon mentions the challenge of modernity to Scripture's authority. How does this challenge manifest in today's society, and what are the implications for believers? [05:17]
How does the dual nature of Scripture as both divine and human influence our understanding and interpretation of biblical texts? [13:18]
The sermon discusses the role of the Holy Spirit in inspiration. How does this role ensure the reliability and authority of Scripture? [17:48]
What does the sermon suggest about the importance of committing to Scripture's authority in shaping our understanding of life and faith? [20:23]
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Application Questions:
Reflect on a time when you relied on human reasoning over Scripture for answers to life's questions. How might recognizing Scripture as a top-down revelation change your approach? [06:37]
In what ways have you experienced the tension between modern scientific progress and the authority of Scripture? How can you navigate this tension in your personal faith journey? [12:48]
How can you balance acknowledging the human authorship of Scripture while maintaining its divine authority in your daily Bible study? [15:01]
Consider the role of the Holy Spirit in your understanding of Scripture. How can you be more open to the Spirit's guidance as you read and apply the Bible? [17:48]
What practical steps can you take to deepen your commitment to Scripture's authority in your life? How might this commitment influence your decisions and actions? [20:23]
Identify a specific area of your life where you struggle to submit to the authority of Scripture. What changes can you make to align more closely with biblical teachings? [07:03]
How can you encourage others in your community to recognize and respect the authority of Scripture in their lives? What role can you play in fostering a culture of biblical literacy and commitment? [19:51]
Sermon Clips
"All Scripture is breathed out by God, and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, for training in righteousness, that the man of God may be competent, equipped for every good work." So this word, inspired, and the doctrine of inspiration comes from this text, and actually comes from many more texts than this, but this is where we start, and it reminds us something, it reminds us something right off the bat, and that is that Scripture is top down. [00:53:24]
Throughout the centuries of human history there has been a desire to answer the big questions, you know, the big questions of life. Who am I? Where did I come from? Where am I going? What is the meaning of all of this? And they're not just questions on a personal level, are they? They're also questions on sort of the macro level. Where did all of this, as we look around and see it, where did it all come from? What is the purpose of it? [02:07:20]
And so as we see the era of the Reformation, we also have the era of the Renaissance, right? And with the Renaissance we have the beginnings of modern science, and the beginnings of modern philosophy. And this enlightenment period moves us into this modern age as we come into the late 1600's and through the 1700's and through the 1800's, and increasingly there was a shift away from the church, a shift away from Scripture as our authority, and instead we began to look within our own head, and we began to stress human autonomy, and rationality, and science, and this was the modern age. [04:21:40]
But whether it's modernity, or post-modernity both of those worldviews have a problem with that idea -- that the answers to the big questions are in fact alien to us. That the answers to "Who am I?" and "Why am I here?" and "Where am I going?" those answers are not going to be found within our own head. Those answers aren't going to be discovered as we apply all of our skill and all of our acumen and all of our abilities to try to figure out the world. Those answers come from above us. [05:54:92]
In fact there was a professor at Harvard in 1891, published a book by Houghton-Mifflin, his name was Joseph Henry Thayer, and in his book he was speaking of the doctrine of inspiration. Just a few years before, Benjamin Warfield, one of the, called the Lion of Old Princeton, the great theologian there at Princeton Theological Seminary, Warfield had published an essay on the inspiration of Scripture, and Thayer was responding to that essay among other things, and this is what he had to say about Warfield's theory of inspiration. [07:12:04]
The upshot of all of this challenge to Mosaic authorship is that Scripture is not a divine revelation but a human creation, just like all of the other religious texts. And then it moved from Moses and the Pentateuch into Jesus and the Gospels. And so, Matthew is not by Matthew, Mark is not by Mark, Luke is not by Luke, John is not by John, these gospels are in fact the product of later communities and their again sort of ideas of Jesus and who He was, and how we relate to Him. [10:53:72]
As we approach Scripture, we have a fundamental question to ask ourselves. It's a question of commitment, a question of first principles. Is this the Word of God or not? That's the fundamental question. Now, we have to nuance this because we think that Scripture is both a divine book and a human book. We don't see the doctrine of inspiration as implying that somehow the Biblical authors entered into a trance-like state and their hand was sort of taken over, and maybe their eyes rolled in the back of their head and before you know it, there was a book. [13:04:64]
We see that the Biblical author's personalities are preserved in the text itself. There are differences. John reads differently than Paul, Peter reads differently than Paul. These are real human authors, so the Bible is a human book. That's a true statement. It's not written in some mystical language, you know. Well if you look at Hebrew you might think it's mystical, but actually it was just the language that was spoken. And Greek might, it's all Greek to me, right? It might look mystical to you, too, but it was written in the common Greek language of the day. [13:47:40]
But we must always say that while it is a human book it is a divine book. So we need to avoid two extremes there. One is not acknowledging that it's a divine book, this is just a human product -- oh it's a great read, very insightful, might even help in your life if you need it, but don't think of it as God's Word, see? Sort of the secular view. There's a long history of that. Then there's the other side, that doesn't want to take into account the human authorship of the text. [15:07:64]
We see this a little bit more in another text that is used when we talk about inspiration, right up there with 2 Timothy 3:16, is 2 Peter 2. Here as we get to the end of Second Peter chapter two, we see in verse sixteen that Peter again is differentiating Scripture from other approaches or other answers to those big questions. And so he says, "We did not follow," in verse sixteen, "We did not follow cleverly devised myths." There were plenty of those around in the first century. [16:15:24]
It was never produced by the will of man, but men spoke from God as they were carried along by the Holy Spirit. You know a nice imagery there sometimes given as a way to understand this is sort of like the way the winds may carry a ship, or the waves may carry a ship, and so there's a preserving there of the human authorship, and Peter well knows his humanity, doesn't he? There's a preserving there of the human authorship, but these words are the words from God. [17:37:24]
If we are going to come to Scripture, if we are going to read it, if we are going to look to it, we are going to have to let it tell us what it is. And what it tells us very clearly is it is the Word of God. Now, different people have tried different ways to explain this doctrine of inspiration. We could have what we call the liberal view; this sort of comes out of that era of the 1880's to the 1910's. This is probably seen best in a quote like Thayer, you know, who says, "We can't bear the yoke of this inspiration anymore." [20:07:32]