“What God Was,
the Word Was”:
The bible is the word of god
Today
we call our Sacred Scriptures “the Bible.” The Bible forms the foundation upon
which are built every teaching and practice of the Iglesia ni Cristo or
the Church of Christ. The Bible-centered method is one
of the defining characteristics that make this Church unique.
However, the attitude of
some more liberal groups concerning the Bible departs even further from the
proper reverence that should be accorded the Scriptures, and some who even
profess to be Christian, calling the Bible only one of many “sacred texts.”
These same people consider the
religious books of other religions, such as those of Buddhism and Hinduism, to
be equally valid “expressions of God’s voice” and worthy of equal consideration
and respect as the Bible. They consider all the “sacred texts” to be God’s
various ways of speaking His truth to man, no matter how much the “truths”
these books teach differ from and contradict one another and the Bible.
Still others give the Bible no
respect at all, as they try to deconstruct it and attempt to read into the
motives of the different writers, assigning them various social and political
agendas. For them, there is no such thing as a sacred text. They see the Bible
only as a human text that can be analyzed and criticized like any other
literary work.
There are those who classify the
Bible as a mere collection of myths, that is, something beyond the realm of
truth. Others believe that the Bible is a mere work of man and just a product
of human imagination.
However, in the Church of Christ,
the Bible is considered indispensable. It is the ultimate authority and guide
to the way the Church members think, feel, and act. Why do God’s words written
in the Bible hold such power over their lives that they untiringly invite
people to listen to and follow His words? The answer to this question rests on
the distinctive attribute of the divine word that is also present in God
Himself.
wHAT gOD WAS, THE WORD WAS
God is unique in that He is
almighty (Gen. 17:1). He has unlimited power. His will always comes to pass
since nothing could ever prevent its fulfillment God’s words possess the same
quality:
“For no word from God shall be
void of power.” (Lk. 1:37, ASV)
Every word from the Almighty God
has power. Like God Himself, His words are of unlimited power. How is God’s
power manifested in His words?
“Bring in
your idols to tell us what is going to happen. Tell us what the former things
were, so that we may consider them and know their final outcome. Or declare to
us the things to come, tell us what the future holds, so we may know that you
are gods. Do something, whether good or bad, so that we will be dismayed and
filled with fear.” (Is. 41:22-23, NIV)
God is able to declare what the
future holds. He can tell us the things to come long before they happen. False
gods, such as idols and graven images, cannot do or say anything, let alone
declare the future. And it is this power of God, which can be seen when what He
says come to pass, that proves that He alone is the true God. God is able to
“make known the end from the beginning” – or declare what will ultimately and
certainly come to pass – because He himself, with His infinite power, brings
His words to fulfillment (Is. 46:9-10). This characteristic of God and of His
words distinguishes Him from man. Man by Himself cannot “declare the things to
come” since he cannot foretell even the day of his own death (Js. 4:14).
Therefore, God’s power and the
power of His words are found in no other. In view of this fact:
·
There is indeed a sacred scripture, the word of
God that “what God was, the word was.”
·
This power of the divine word, “declaring the
things to come,” cannot be found in any “human text.”
·
Only the scripture that have the power of the
divine word or the attributes of the word of God can rightfully claim to be the
Sacred Scripture where the words of God are indeed written.
DECLARING WHAT THE FUTURE HOLDS
The Great War
The Bible contains several
examples of God’s words that were declared long ago but were appointed to take
place in the time when the end is near. In one instance during the Lord Jesus
Christ’s ministry on earth, His disciples asked Him concerning the time of His
Second Coming, which is also the end of the world (Mt. 24:3). The Lord replied
thus:
“Just so,
when you see all these things beginning to happen, you can know that my return
is near, even at the doors.” (Mt. 24:33, LB)
The Lord Jesus spoke of the
occurrence of events that would signal His second Coming and the end of the
world. He was able to prophecy concerning future events, not because He Himself
is God, but because He spoke the words given to Him by God who sent Him and not
His own opinions (Jn. 12:49; 17:3). Hence, the words that Christ spoke were
God’s words. The events that Christ foretold were the events that God declared
would happen.
Which are these events that
Christ prophesied would signal that the end of the world is near?
“You are
going to hear the noise of battles close by and news of battles far away; but
do not be troubled. Such things must happen, but they do not mean that the end has
come.” (Mt. 24:6, TEV)
The first sign that Jesus gave as
an answer to His disciples’ question about the signs of His return and the end
of the world was a war that would be dramatically different from all other wars
that preceded it. What would make this war so unique is that the news of its
battles would quickly spread both far and wide. This great war prophesied by
the Lord Jesus Christ found fulfillment in the war that was once called “the
war to end all wars,” or the First World War which began on July 27, 1914.1
In this war that would take place
to mark the approach of the world’s end, how would the news of the battles be
heard from far away?
“But you, Daniel, shut up the words, and seal
the book until the time of the end; many shall run to and fro, and knowledge
shall increase.” (Dan. 12:4, NKJV)
The increase in knowledge would
help people run to and fro and also contribute to the speedy dissemination of
reports concerning World War I. The kind of knowledge, which would rapidly
increase before this Great War and continue as the end of the world draws near,
is clarified in another translation of the same verse quoted above:
“But
Daniel, keep this prophecy a secret; seal it up so that it will not be
understood until the end times, when travel and education shall be vastly
increased.” (Dan. 12:4, LB)
Through the great advantages in
“travel and education” – or transportation and communication technologies –
important events around the world could be made known to people throughout the
world almost instantly. And the first war in which modern technology was used
for the rapid spread of news was the First World War. Historians Arthur Boak,
Preston Slosson, and Howard Anderson recorded these advances in knowledge and
invention which were first used in World War I and thereby stand as a testimony
to the power of God’s words to always find fulfillment:
“A very
large part of recent scientific invention has concerned itself with this
problem of getting people, goods, and message quickly from place to place. For
moving people and goods, we have the steamship, the railway, the automobile and
motor truck, the airship and the airplane; for getting thoughts quickly from
one mind to another, we have the telegraph, the cable, the telephone, the
wireless telegraph, and the radio.”2
Advances in Communication and Transportation
When did the great advances in
information and communication technologies begin to find fulfillment?
“The
electric telegraph was the product of many minds in many lands, but it became a
practical success in the hands of the American, Mores, in 1844. A submarine
cable was laid between England
and France in 1851, and
across Atlantic, after several failures, in
1866. The telephone entered commerce with the American inventor, Bell, in 1876. The
Italian, Marconi, succeeded with wireless telegraphy around 1896. Radio was
invented shortly before the First World War.”3
Trough the rapid and successive
progression of inventions, God was already paving the way for the news of the
war to spread quickly. These great leaps in information and communication
technologies prophesied thousands of years earlier all took place within the 70
years preceding the start of the Great War.
On the other hand, when was the
fulfillment of the “running to and fro” or the great advancements in
transportation that contributed to the quick transmission of the news of the
First World War? What vehicles were used to help people travel so quickly?
“The
chariots race madly through the streets, they rush to and fro through the
squares; their appearance is like torches, they dart like lightning.” (Na. 2:4,
NRSV)
In this prophecy, God’s prophet
Nahum spoke of chariots that would be speeding “to and fro” through the streets
and squares and would be illuminated like torches. In ancient times, chariots
were the only vehicles used for land travel. What else would be the quality of
these land vehicles that the prophet foresaw?
“The
chariots shall rage in the streets, they shall justle one against another in
the broad way; they shall seem like torches they shall run like the
lightnings.” (Na. 2:4, KJV)
These chariots which the prophet
saw in his vision of the present era and recorded in the inspired Scriptures
would be jostling against or banging into one another even in the broadways and
highways. People of the modern era are witnesses to the fulfillment of God;s
words in the cars and automobiles of today, as they speed through the streets
(“The chariots race madly through the streets”) with their headlights on (“their
appearance is like torches”), occasionally getting into accidents with one
another (“they shall justle one against another”).
Just as information and
communication technologies began experiencing rapid leaps of growth and
development in the relatively small period of time preceding World War I, the
same thing happened with inventions in transportation:
“Then the
gasoline automobile came into practical use in the eighteen-nineties.”4
Rapid transportation on land with
the modern “chariots” of today started in the 1890’s. This was approximately
only two decades before the start of the First World War. Meanwhile, rapid
transportation on water or the seas began only about 140 years before the start
of the war:
“The
invention of the steam engine (about 1770) is attributed to James Watt, a
Scotch inventor.”5
When did travel “to and fro” in
the air begin?
“The
airplane was the invention chiefly of two Americans, the Wright brothers. It
was in 1905 that these two men made their first successful airplane flights.”6
It was less than ten years after
the invention of the airplane when these vehicles were first used in the “Great
War.” Thus, it was the First World War in which all the new advancements in
communications and transportation were used. These new inventions hastened the
spread of news concerning this war and were also used as instruments during the
war.
In the present day when man’s
sense of amazement and wonder at the continuingly rapid advancements in
technology has been replaced by the thought that al these are now ordinary and
commonplace, the great significance of the First World War should never be
underestimated. The impact which God’s words and these terrifying visions had
on the ancient prophets must have been profound. This was the first war in
history considered global in scale, and the first war in history to be fought
not only on land and on the seas but also under the ground in the trenches and
far above the ground in the skies.7
The Bible’s Unmistakable Description
of the Condition of Our Time
Even with regard to the
condition of our time in these last days, the Bible provides an unmistakable
description. Through the apostles, this is what the words of God declare:
“But know this, that in the last days perilous
times will come: For men will be lovers of themselves, lovers of money,
boasters, proud, blasphemers, disobedient to parents, unthankful, unholy,
unloving, unforgiving, slanderers, without self-control, brutal, despisers of
good, traitors, headstrong, haughty, lovers of pleasure rather than lovers of
God, having a form of godliness but denying its power. And from such people
turn away!” (II Tim. 3:1-5, NKJV)
We do not have to look
far. Right within the confines of our homes we see on television how perilous
our time is. The rising tide of criminality is so alarming. Wanton crimes
continue to be perpetrated against persons and properties. For these, various
corrective measures have been imposed such as stricter gun laws and stiffer
penalties to deter criminals, but to no avail. The sanctity of the home is now
endangered, threatened by domestic violence brought about by squabbling couples
and disrespectful children. So many lives have been snuffed out. So many dreams
have been shattered.
This point to the
conclusion that what is written in the Bible is true. Thus, we are assured that
the Bible we are using now is the true Holy Scriptures because this has the
quality of the words of God: What He says will surely happen.
The Bible: Our
Sacred Scripture
Therefore, the Bible is indeed
the Sacred Scripture, the word of God. “What God was, the word was.” God’s
power to declare what the future holds, telling us the things to come long
before they happen. Since the power of God’s words are found in the words
written in the Bible, the Bible also declares what the future holds, long
before it happens; thus the Bible is indeed not a human text, not a collection
of myth, not in equal status with other “sacred scriptures,” but the only
Sacred Scripture where the words of God are written.
Since God’s words written in the
Bible came to pass, we know with certainty that His words are filled with
power. Nothing can hinder the Almighty’s words from having the intended effect
for which He spoke them. His words are the truth because He always makes them
come true. That is why all people should trust in His words found in the Bible.
They should completely obey all His teachings and His commandments and accept
all His prophetic utterances.
SOURCE: Lopez, E. M. The Bible: Our Sacred Scripture, A General Introduction To The Bible. Quezon City, Philippines: 2010.
End Notes:
1
Story of the Great War, edited by Francis
J. Reynolds, et al. New York,
USA:
P.F.Collier and Son, 1916. Vol. 2, p. 291..
2
Boak, Arthur E.R., Slosson, Preston, and
Anderson, Howard R. World History, edited by Langer, William L. USA:
Houghton Mifflin Company, 1942. vol. 2, p. 542.
3
Ibid., p. 543
4
Ibid., p. 544
5
Elson, Henry W. Modern Time and the Living
Past. USA:
American Book Company, 1946. p. 431)
6
Ibid., p. 667, footnote
7
Boak, et. al., pp. 478-479).
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