Day 56 – what about the Bible?
We need to tie up a few loose ends before we conclude. First of all, I want to make you aware that the Bible has seldom been referred to on this leg of our journey. You may have already noticed this dearth of scripture and assumed that it was an accident. Just the opposite is true. You have seen few Biblical references along the way because that was what I intended from the start.
Daily Quotation
Quoted in Fleming Rutledge, Help My Unbelief (Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans Publishing, 2000), 190.
"Mr. Crampton, I don't believe that story ...” –a young STUDENT, to his Sunday School teacher
We need to tie up a few loose ends before we conclude. First of all, I want to make you aware that the Bible has seldom been referred to on this leg of our journey. You may have already noticed this dearth of scripture and assumed that it was an accident. Just the opposite is true. You have seen few Biblical references along the way because that was what I intended from the start.
This may at first glance seem a bit hypocritical. Why would I, a professing Christian who loves and reveres the Bible, not include it herein? If I consider it to be true, why would I ignore it? If I am arguing about the existence of God, how could I omit a source so pivotal to that belief, one whose first four words are, "In the beginning, God..."?
The reason I have declined to use it is rather simple. I have tried to give everyone journeying with us some valid reasons for believing in God. Some who have chosen to read this book are Bible-believers. Quoting scripture would be just fine with them. On the other hand, atheists in the audience would object, for they do not believe that the Bible is true. If I had argued, "I believe in God, because the Bible says God exists," their response would have been, "So what? I don't believe what the Bible says.” To them, the Bible is a prejudiced source. They consider it biased testimony, the kind you would expect an impartial jury to mistrust.
For this reason, I have chosen to begin where we all can agree and proceed from there. I have attempted to start at our common ground instead of embarking from our areas of contention. Purposely avoiding the Bible’s testimony, I have chosen to use as evidence the universe which we encounter every day. What do we know about the universe around us, and how can it best be explained? Does the kind of world we live in make the most sense with or without a God behind it? This has been the type of argument I have put before you from the first day until now. In doing so, I have chosen a path that has steered us clear of Bible verses as proof texts.
Be assured that this detour is only temporary. On a later leg of our journey, I will lead you on a path lit with such verses. I will use the Bible freely, holding it high before you in public with the same zeal that, even now, I feel for it in my heart. Until then, the theist should be comforted (and, I think, the atheist troubled) that a strong case can be made for God's existence even with the Bible temporarily placed on the shelf. If anything, this will make us respect the Bible all the more when, in due time, we pick it up again.
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