The Book Secure In Its Eternal Existence
Charles C. Pugh III
March 6, 2012
The
Bible has a self-evidencing nature to the effect that it consists not of
merely “passing or temporary enactments, but eternal laws” (Rawlinson
112). The indestructibility of the Bible, as evidenced from history,
sustains the biblical claim, and the experience of those who, as the
Psalmist, can say, “I have known of old that You have founded them [Your
testimonies] forever” (Ps. 119:152).
Consider the following argument concerning its indestructibility as proof of the divine origin of the Bible:
- If the Bible’s continued survival could not be achieved by unaided human effort, then the Bible’s origin must be the result of a supernatural source (i.e. God).
- The Bible’s continued survival could not be achieved by unaided human effort.
- Therefore, the Bible’s origin must be the result of a supernatural source (i.e. God).
As
evidence of the remarkable continued survival of the Bible, I cite data
from a mid-twentieth century (1959) classic book on apologetics and an
early twenty-first century (2001) book authored by a world renowned
manuscript scholar. From the former, consider the following evidence of
the unique survival of the biblical revelation, which testifies to its everlasting foundation:
.
. . Any ancient book had to run the gamut of the forces of decay and
neglect. . . . [I]n antiquity books were produced entirely by hand and
so were greatly restricted in number and distribution. Through fire,
sword, decay, neglect, insects, mold, storms, and all other sorts of
improvidence, the toll taken on ancient manuscripts was great.
In view of all this the survival of the Bible from antiquity with such
a remarkable attestation is amazing. In reference to the Old Testament
we know that the Jews preserved it as no other manuscript has ever been
preserved. . . . [T]hey kept tabs on every letter, syllable, word, and
paragraph. They had special classes of men within their culture whose
sole duty was to preserve and transmit these documents with practically
perfect fidelity. . . . Who ever counted the letters and syllables and
words of Plato or Aristotle? Cicero or Seneca?
In
regard to the New Testament there are about thirteen thousand
manuscripts, complete and incomplete, in Greek and other languages, that
have survived from antiquity. No other work from classical antiquity
has such attestation. . . .
.
. . The Bible has survived the ravages of time in all its manifold
means of destruction with a numerical and textual attestation that is
many furlongs beyond even the closest competitor.
. . . No other book has been so persecuted; no other book has been so victorious over its persecutions. . . .
.
. . The attacks have been publicized abroad in a never-ending stream of
periodicals, journals, pamphlets, monographs, books, and
encyclopaedias. The larger universities of the world and hundreds of
theological seminaries have taken up the cause of radical criticism. A
thousand times over, the death knell of the Bible has been sounded, the
funeral procession formed, the inscription cut on the tombstone, and the
committal read. But somehow the corpse never stays put.
No
other book has been so chopped, knived, sifted, scrutinized, and
vilified. What book on philosophy or religion or psychology . . . has
been subject to such a mass attack as the Bible? with such venom and
skepticism? with such thoroughness and erudition? upon every chapter,
line, and tenet?
.
. . The Bible is still loved by millions, read by millions, and studied
by millions. No doubt a terrible amount of damage has been done by
radical criticism, and millions have lost faith in the veracity and
authority of the Bible, as tragically witnessed by the decay of church
attendance, the spiritual enervation of our western culture, and the
cancerous secularism of America, England, and continental Europe. But
even so, radical criticism has not put the Bible out of circulation. It
still remains the most published and most read book in the world of
literature. Its survival through time, persecution, and criticism is
remarkable. (Ramm 230-233)
Christopher de Hamel, whose book History of Illuminated Manuscripts
(1994) is a standard work in its field, is a scrupulous scholar. In the
early part of this decade he also authored what has been described as
an “utterly gripping account of the world’s most remarkable book.
Writing as an historian who is an expert in ancient manuscripts, De
Hamel says,
THE
HISTORY OF THE BIBLE is perhaps the biggest subject in the world. . . .
It is generally and credibly asserted that more copies of the Bible
have been published . . . than any other text. . . . It is more widely
disseminated than any other written text, and there is probably hardly a
person in the world now without achievable access to a copy, usually
even in their own language. That cannot be said of any other written
text. . . .
. . . The
history of the Bible also includes accounts of burning and deliberate
destruction. . . . The Bible exists simultaneously in many languages (in
this it differs from many holy texts of other religions) but its actual
text has hardly changed at all in thousands of years, except for the
occasional disputed phrase here or there, or a delicate realignment of
emphasis. This will reassure those who believe and use the Bible now. . .
.
. . . [A]ll evidence confirms
that the text of the Christian Bible as we have it today has been
maintained and transmitted with extraordinary accuracy. . . . No
significant variations or deliberate falsifications have ever been found
to shake public confidence in the Bible as a whole. (vi, viii, 319-20, 329, emp. added).
Two thousand years of history evidence the unique indestructibility of the Bible. We believe the objective mind concludes that the Bible’s continued survival, in light of all to which it has been subjected from the negative side, evidences it is the result of a supernatural source (i.e. God). “Concerning Your testimonies I have known of old that You have founded them forever” (Ps. 119:152).
Works Cited:
De Hamel, Christopher. The Book. A History of the Bible. New York: Phaidon, 2001.
Ramm, Bernard. Protestant Christian Evidences. 1953. Chicago: Moody, 1959.
Rawlinson, G. “The Book of Psalms: Exposition.” Vol. 3. Pulpit Commentary. Vol. 8. 1950. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1962.
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