By James Blaine Chapman
QUESTIONS/ANSWERS ON THE BIBLEQUESTION #1 -- I have
sometimes been troubled over
questions arising regarding our
English Bible. As a child I
thought our English Bible was
inspired word by word by the
Spirit of the Lord. When I found
that the Bible was originally
written in Hebrew and Greek and
translated into English by mere
men, I was puzzled. Then when I
found scholars claim some
translations are more or less
inaccurate, and that some
passages, like John 8:1-11, do
not have authority in the
original at all, and that there
are a good many English
translations, I was still very
much troubled. Finally, I have
come to the place where I think
I may state my faith as follows:
I believe that the Holy
Scriptures as found in the
original languages were verbally
and literally inspired by the
Spirit of God, and that although
there are some minor errors and
uncertainties in our English
translation, yet no vital
history, doctrine or duty is
affected thereby, and that
therefore our English Bible is
dependable and trustworthy. Do
you think this statement a sound
and proper one? ANSWER #2 -- I think I would
start with the probability of a
revelation of God's will to men,
and would argue that the wisdom
of God and man's need and
capacity to know all speak of
the probability of such a
revelation. Then I would go on
to say that nature does not
reveal the principal things we
need to know, as, the moral
character of God and man's
origin, duty and destiny; that
left to themselves men
invariably drift into
uncertainty and all around
deterioration. I would meet all
claims that science or art can
be God's method of revelation by
showing that these are
insufficient because they do not
speak a language that common
people can understand. Thus I
would shut the problem up to the
fact that either the Bible is
God's revelation to man or else
there is no such revelation.
Either God has spoken through
His written Word or He has not
spoken at all. It is either the
Bible and Christianity or
darkness and death, and men
intuitively draw back from
darkness and death, so the
probability and desirability are
both in favor of the Bible. That
is to say it is not the Bible or
something better, rather it is
the Bible or nothing at all.
Then I would present the Bible
and show that it does reveal the
moral character of God. It does
reveal to man what he needs to
know about his origin, his duty
and his destiny. Wherever it has
been received the hopes of men
individually have become bright
and the economic, intellectual,
social and moral life of the
people has reached its highest
and best form. I would contrast
this with the state of men in
lands where the Bible is unknown
or disregarded. Then I would
show how persistent the Bible
has been to be able to outlive
all its persecutors. I would
show how its prophecies have
been verified, its history has
been substantiated by spade and
stone, its science has never
been outgrown, and its morality
has gone in advance of every
code of ethics that has yet
appeared among men. And finally,
I would conclude, as Paul so
often did, by presenting the
results of my own test tube
experience in the laboratory of
personal religion. This is as
valid as the exhibits of the
geologist or the psychologist. I
would be fair and rational, but
I would be firm and unwavering
in declaring that I have met God
in just the way the Bible says
one may meet Him, and that I
have proved the Bible to be the
Word of God and true just as the
mathematician has proved his
answers and as the scientist has
proved the theories of
philosophy, and I would pray God
to give you spiritual
understanding Do you think I
would be able to convince you? ANSWER #6 -- The word Amen
appears for the first time in
the Bible in Numbers 5:22 where
the woman in the trial for
jealousy is instructed to use it
in repeated form in connection
with the curse which is to come
if she is guilty. Here, in most
solemn form, the meaning
evidently is, "Let it be so."
The Popular and Critical Bible
Encyclopedia has this to say on
the subject: "This word is
strictly an adjective,
signifying firm, and
metaphorically, faithful. Thus
in Revelation 3:14; our Lord is
called the Amen, the faithful
and true witness. In Isaiah
65:16 the Hebrew has 'the God of
Amen,' which our version renders
'the God of truth,' that is, of
fidelity. In its adverbial sense
Amen means certainly, truly,
surely. It is used in beginning
of a sentence by way of emphasis
-rarely in the Old Testament
(Jeremiah 28:6), but often by
our Savior in the New, where it
is commonly translated verily.
In John's Gospel alone it is
often used by Him in this way
double, that is, verily, verily.
In the end of a sentence it
often occurs singly or
repeatedly, especially at the
end of hymns or prayers, as
'amen and amen' (Psalm 41:13;
72:19; 89:53). The proper
significance of it in this
position is to confirm the words
which have preceded, and invoke
the fulfillment of them, 'so be
it,' fiat; Septuagint genoito.
Hence in oaths, after the priest
has repeated the words of the
covenant or imprecation, all
those who pronounce the 'amen'
bind themselves by the oath
(Numbers 5:22; Deut. 22:15-17;
Neh. 5:13; 8:6; I Chronicles
16:36; compare Psalm 106:48).
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