Saturday, February 15, 2014

Puzzle Piece 14: Abortion

In the last Piece we talked about one of the great moral and cultural challenges facing Christians these days, homosexuality and same-sex marriage, and this time we need to discuss another: abortion.  Abortion has become so widespread and widely available in most Western countries that it seems almost impossible to conceive of a time when it wasn’t so endemic.  Since being legalised in America in the famous Roe v Wade case of 1973 there have been over 55 million abortions in the US; that’s more than twice the population of Australia.  In Australia, it is a little harder to get accurate figures, but Medicare claims for abortion numbered 76,546 Australia wide in 2009.[1]  But why does it matter?  And what right do we have to force our religious views on others?  Isn’t this an issue of women’s autonomy, of women’s health, of a woman’s right to do as she chooses with her own body?  That depends…

TFY’d: abortion
Many people involved in this debate make claims about the difficulty of the abortion issue, labelling it as complex, involving many different factors.  But it’s not.  It’s actually really simple, and the whole discussion hinges on the answer to one simple question: what is the unborn?  If the unborn is not a valuable human being, then we don’t really need to bother with any of the objections raised above, because if an abortion doesn’t take the life of an innocent human being then no justification for having one is needed.  But if abortion does take the life of an innocent human being, then none of those reasons above seem adequate.  Here’s the pro-life view in a nice, easy to remember three-liner:
1.       It is wrong to take the life of an innocent human being without adequate justification.
2.       Abortion takes the life of an innocent human being without adequate justification.
3.       Therefore, abortion is wrong.
In this debate, almost no one is going to argue about Premise 1, so we’ll just take that for granted and move into discussing Premise 2, the real sticking point between pro-lifers and pro-choicers.

The unborn – what is it?
There is a surprising amount of confusion over what seems to be a very simple question.  To answer it, we turn not to the Bible or any other religious text, but to the science of embryology, which has a lot to tell us about what kind of thing the unborn actually is, and the answer is clear: from the earliest stages of development, the unborn are distinct, living, and whole human beings. 
In The Developing Human: Clinically Oriented Embryology, now in its 9th edition and “Highly Commended” by the British Medical Association in 2012, authors Moore, Persuad and Torchia write that:
…human development begins at fertilization when a male gamete or sperm unites with a female gamete or oocyte to form a single cell-a zygote.  This highly specialized totipotent cell marked the beginning of each of us as a unique individual.[2]
In 1981, a US Senate committee heard evidence on when human life begins and concluded that:
Physicians, biologists and other scientists agree that conception marks the beginning of the life of a human being – a being that is alive and is a member of the human species.  There is overwhelming agreement on this point in countless medical, biological, and scientific writings.[3]
Oddly, there is some disagreement among scientists about when something can be considered ‘alive’, for example there is disagreement about whether things like viruses are really ‘alive’, but there is general consensus that something that has the following three characteristics can rightfully be considered ‘alive’:
1.       Irritability, which is reaction to stimuli
2.       Metabolism, which means converting food to energy, and
3.       Cellular reproduction, which means that it grows.
The unborn exhibit all three of these characteristics from the very beginning.  (Further, from a common sense perspective, if it wasn’t alive, why would you need an abortion?)  But, some critics would point out, an individual skin cell also exhibits these three qualities, and no one is arguing for skin cell rights!  Is this a reasonable rejoinder? Not at all.  If you implanted a skin cell into a uterus it would remain just that – a skin cell.  A zygote, on the other hand, has the ability to govern its own development without directional input from the outside – it is a fully functional human being, not just a part of one.  True, it’s not mature, but we’ll get to that objection later. 

It’s just a clump of cells…
In the few minutes after death, many cells continue to function normally, but we recognise that the person/organism is actually dead.  So what’s the difference between the small group of cells in the embryo and a group of cells in a dead body?  Dr Maureen Condic, assistant professor of neurobiology and anatomy at the University of Utah says that:
…death occurs when the body ceases to act in a coordinated manner to support the continued healthy function of all bodily organs.  Cellular life may continue for some time following the loss of integrated bodily function, but once the ability to act in a coordinated manner has been lost, ‘life’ cannot be restored to a corpse – no matter how ‘alive’ the cells composing the body may yet be…[embryos, however] possess the single defining feature of human life that is lost in the moment of death – the ability to function as a coordinated organism rather than merely as a group of living human cells…[4]
Clearly, there is something about this clump of cells that makes it more than just a clump of cells. 



SLED
Having shown that the unborn is indisputably an individual, human being we need to turn more specifically to some of the reasons people give for advocating abortion, and there is a simple little acronym that can help you to handle almost any objection to the pro-life view: SLED.
S – size
L – level of development
E – environment
D – degree of dependency
These four letters will help you show that almost every pro-choice argument in favour of abortion is ignoring the scientific data above and treating the unborn as something other than a unique member of the human race.  Let’s go through them one by one first, then see how they can be applied in conversations. 
Size
You will often hear people make statements that relate to the size of the unborn, especially at the zygote or embryo stage, statements like, "It's so tiny, too small to be a real baby."  Whenever you hear someone make a statement in favour of abortion that relates to the size of the unborn it's important to point out to them that size has absolutely nothing to do with what the unborn is, or if it should be considered valuable.  Are short people less valuable than tall people?  Are fat people more valuable than thin people?  We understand, when thinking about people who have been born, that the size they are is a morally neutral fact about them, and the person who suggest otherwise when it comes to the unborn is claiming that the foetus is not a real human being.  After all, if it was a born human being they would never make the connection between size and value.  When you hear this objection, take your conversation partner back to the scientific facts above about what the unborn really is. 
Level of Development
Related to the size objection is the claim that the foetus is just a clump of cells, or it lacks some particular element, like a heart or brain, and that it doesn't have enough body parts to be considered human.  This objection seems to make sense on the surface, after all it certainly doesn't look like a baby until all the parts have formed, but is it really relevant?  The foetus looks exactly like it is supposed to at that stage of its development.  Newborns bear only a passing resemblance to the teenagers they will become, and those teenagers don't look that much like they will when they are 80, but so what?  The level of development which a person is currently at is no indicator of their value.  Again, the person who makes this claim has begun treating the unborn as though they are not a human being.  Ask them this question, "Are toddlers more valuable than infants because they are more physically developed? Are teenagers?"  This is why talking about the unborn in such language as "potential person" is not a good idea - we are not interested in their potential at some distant point in the future, we are interested in their value in their current state.  (Personhood language is actually entirely distractive in this discussion.  We don’t have ‘person rights’ we have ‘human rights’ and if a thing is human then it is entitled to all those human rights, including the right to life.) 
Environment
Many pro-choicers will make a distinction between an unborn baby and a born baby, and very few are willing to advocate for post-birth abortion (though this idea is gaining traction in certain circles).  Intuitively, once the baby has been born there seems to be something upon which almost all people can agree that makes post-birth abortion wrong…but what is it?  What is it about the few-inch journey down the birth canal that turns a previously valueless entity into something that must be protected and nurtured?  Does something magical happen in that journey to change the nature of the thing itself?  If so, what about babies born through caesarean sections?   They don’t travel through the birth canal, so do they get that magical transformation too?  In fact, the Environment in which one finds oneself is completely irrelevant to the nature of the thing itself.  When you roll over in bed you don’t change what you are!
Degree of Dependency
Another objection against the pro-life view that is often used is that the baby is completely dependent on the mother, therefore she has the right to decide what should happen to it.  But, again, the person making this claim isn’t considering the unborn to be completely human.  To show this, trot out a toddler – metaphorically of course (unless you happen to have one handy…).  All newborns and children (and many teenagers!) are completely dependent on others for every element of their lives, just as dependant as the unborn are on their mothers, yet it would be a ludicrous claim for someone to make if they said they could take the life of a toddler for those reasons.  Also, there are many people of all ages who are completely dependent on others to survive, the disabled or the elderly, the sick and infirm, but that dependency is not a sufficient reason to permit taking those human beings’ lives!

Some other objections:
It’s about choice! – When you hear this, it again become clear that the one making the claim is failing to recognise the full humanity of the unborn.  What they are really saying is that they should be able to choose to take the life of another human being – but we don’t accept this argument in any area other area of life, so why should it work here?  Again, trot out the toddler and ask if you should be able to choose to end that toddler’s life and you will quickly see a rejoinder that fits into one of the SLED areas above.
If you don’t like abortion, don’t have one! – This one’s become so popular you can buy it as a bumper-sticker and plaster it on your car.  But let’s try a few modifications to it and see how well it works: If you don’t like slavery, don’t own one.  Or how about: If you don’t like wife beating, don’t beat your wife.  Obviously, these modifications trade on the idea that, as a society, we recognise that some things are actually wrong, regardless of whether or not we personally participate in them, and the taking of innocent human life is one of those things.  No one is content to sit on a jury at a murder trial and say, “well, I wouldn’t murder anyone, but that doesn’t mean no one else should either.”  It’s obvious, isn’t it?
Women will die through back alley abortions! – Again, this objection fails to count the unborn as truly human.  This objection is making the highly questionable claim that because some people will die attempting to kill others, the state should make it safe and legal for them to do so.   Doesn’t that seem odd to you?  Why should the law be faulted for making it more risky for one human being to take the life of another, completely innocent one?  Should we legalise bank robbery to make it safer for felons?  Obviously not!
No disabled child should be brought into the world when it can be so easily avoided. – We think we can all agree that disabled children are human, and killing them is killing humans.  Just because the unborn are smaller, defenceless, and disabled is killing them justified?  As well, one should ask handicapped persons if they wish they had been aborted rather than born.  Let’s take a classic example of two babies born in Austria a number of years ago.  One was a healthy boy for which the mother was glad.  The other was a girl.  She had Downs Syndrome.[5]  Nevertheless, this mother loved the little girl and taught her to care for herself.  One day the mother had a stroke, which left her helpless.  Her disabled daughter took over her care for the rest of her life.  The boy grew up just fine.  The whole world later heard of him.  His name was Adolf Hitler.  Which of these babies would be the most likely to have been aborted?  A professor once posed this medical situation — and ethical problem — to his students: “Here’s the family history: The father has syphilis.  The mother has TB.  They already have had four children.  The first is blind.  The second had died.  The third is deaf.  The fourth has TB.  Now the mother is pregnant again.  They are willing to have an abortion, if you decide they should.  What do you say?”  The professor asked the students to break into small groups for “consultation.”  All of the groups came back to report that they would recommend abortion.  “Congratulations,” the professor said, “You just took the life of Beethoven!”  The point of these illustrations is that having a disability is not an indicator of the worth of a human life!

Three final thoughts
Rape – this is often the very first scenario that people say would make an abortion acceptable, and it is certainly the most emotionally laden issue with which to deal.  Rape is one of the worst indignities a person can suffer, and when discussing this we must have the greatest compassion for rape victims.  However, a few things need to be considered.  Firstly, having an abortion will not in any sense make the person ‘unraped’, and she will still have to carry the scars of her ordeal for the rest of her life.  An abortion won’t change that.  Secondly, justice cannot be obtained for a rape victim by punishing the innocent unborn baby who resulted from the rape.  If the unborn really are human beings, as we decided earlier, then they have a right to life just as the mother does, as we all do.  Is this a terribly difficult decision for a woman to make?  Absolutely!  But the difficulty of the decision doesn’t change any of the factors involve.  In his 1 January, 2012 podcast, STR speaker Alan Shlemon talks about his friend Susan who became pregnant after being raped, and he discusses how, in her own words, keeping the child was the easy decision because she understood well exactly what is was she was carrying.  Was it difficult for her to carry that baby to term?  Absolutely!  But the way the child was conceived does nothing to change the thing it is.  Further, many women who have an abortion after being raped find later in life that they are carrying the scars of two events: the initial rape, and the abortion that followed. 
What about incest? – Another common circumstance under which many say abortion should be permitted is in the case of incest.  To deal with this, simply trot out the toddler.  Ask if a three year old conceived by incest could be killed.  If the answer is no, then ask what is the difference between that three year old and the unborn.  Whatever their answer, refer back to the SLED anagram above and you will see that the reason they advocate it is because they are not thinking of the unborn as a full human being.
Mother’s life is in danger – many times in this discussion you will hear of a woman who had an abortion after her doctor told her that something unusual was happening with the pregnancy and that there was a chance her life could be in danger.  You will also hear of many cases where the mother decided to keep the baby, and it was born perfectly fine.  But what if the mother’s life actually is in danger?  Let’s stipulate that the mother actually would die, no uncertainty, definitely would die.  In that case it seems that regardless of the course of action one life would be lost, and potentially both if the problem killed both the baby and the mother.  In this case, it seems that it would be permissible to have the abortion.  However, consider this: in most cases where women have abortions to avert problems in the pregnancy there is not a 100% chance that her life is in jeopardy, and yet abortion takes the life of the baby in 100% of cases, so if there is only a 50% chance of the mother dying, but a 100% chance of the baby dying, doesn’t it seem that abortion would not be justified in that case?

What should we say to those who’ve had an abortion?
To conclude, we need to consider how we might approach this issue with someone who has actually had an abortion.  If we are successful in demonstrating the full humanity of the unborn then she will come to realise exactly what it is she has done in the past.  Actually, this is not restricted to women – the men whose partners have had abortions are often as impacted by it as the woman herself.  There are a few things we need to keep in mind. 
Firstly, you will notice that throughout this Piece we have never used words like ‘murder’ or ‘baby killing’, words that are too often used by opponents of abortion.  It’s not because we think those words are inaccurate; it’s that they are so emotionally charged that they are not suitable for use in a conversation that will already be filled with high emotions.  Avoiding words like these can go a long way to making your message less offensive and more palatable.  But, even if you talk about it in the mildest terms possible, there can be no escaping the realisation of what has actually happened, and often guilt and shame will be carried by a woman in these circumstances for a long time.  As Christians, it is at this time that we would turn to our Bibles and share with them the freedom from guilt that only the Cross can bring. 

To impart a message of condemnation about abortion without also preaching the solution to that condemnation would be not just a disservice to those suffering under the burden of their actions, but would risk pushing them further away from the very thing they need: forgiveness and release from guilt.


[1] Yes, abortion is covered by Medicare, which means that if you pay tax, you fund abortions.
[2] 2008 edition, cited in Scott Klusendorf, The Case for Life, Crossway Books, Illinois, 2009, p. 35, emphasis added.
[3] Subcommittee on Separation of Powers to Senate Judiciary Committee S-158, Report, 97th Congress, 1st Session, 1981.  Cited in ibid, p. 36.
[4] Maureen L. Condic, ‘Life: Defining the Beginning by the End’, First Things, May, 2003, , accessed 27th October, 2013.
[5] These days as many as 90% of children diagnosed in utero with Downs Syndrome are aborted.

Puzzle Piece 12: Is the Bible really God's word?

We’ve spent the last 11 Puzzle Pieces moving closer and closer to the God of Christianity, and it seems reasonable now to conclude that he exists and that the central message of Christianity, that Jesus died and rose from the dead, is an actual historical event.  But we can’t stop there.  Now that we’ve shown Christianity to be a reasonable faith, we need to start looking at a few key issues from the uniquely Christian perspective.  But in order to do that, we need a source of Christian teaching that can help us, and that’s the Bible.  In the last two Pieces we looked at the Bible as a purely historical document, like any other from antiquity…but is it more than that?  That’s what we want to have a look at today.

TFY’d: The Bible as God’s Word
The Bible is one of two things: it is either God’s words to men, or men’s words about God.  If it is the second, then can we have confidence that living by its precepts will actually lead us to God?  What if the men who wrote it got it wrong?  We saw over the last two pieces that we can have confidence that what we have today is what was actually written many centuries ago, but for a Christian to be confident that the content of the Bible is actually correct it needs to be more than that.  It needs to be a book from God.  Let’s spend today looking at four major challenges that are often made about the Bible and its content and see if we can actually have that confidence:
1.     How do we know the Bible was inspired by God?
2.     Hasn’t the Bible been changed by all the translations it has gone through over the centuries?
3.     Since men were involved in the writing of the Bible, and men make mistakes, how can we trust it?
4.     Isn’t the Bible just a matter of your own interpretation?

1) How do we know the Bible was inspired by God?
This is a very important question for Christians to answer because the Bible itself claims to be from God.  We routinely read in the Old Testament statements like “Thus says the Lord…”[1] or “The word of the Lord came to me…”[2] and in the New Testament statements like “All Scripture is given by inspiration of God”[3] and we need to see if we can actually have confidence that those statements are accurately reflecting the Bible’s origins.  At this point, we will not be discussing the question of HOW God inspired the Bible – that’s an interesting topic but it would take us too far afield from our focus on IF God inspired the Bible.  If you’re interested in that question, we recommend a DVD by the late John Stott called The Bible and the Christian Life in which he discusses the how at length. 

The other reason that this topic is so important is that if the Bible really is from God, if he really is speaking to us, then that means we have to listen to what he says!  If the creator of the universe has communicated with us, then it would probably be a good idea to listen!
There are six things that the Bible contains that point to its divine origins.  These are not things that will be 100% convincing to everyone, but I believe they are enough to give us confidence that this is not just a mere book about God from men.  In his presentation called The Bible: Has God Spoken apologist and Christian thinker Greg Koukl outlines these six and links each of them to a part of your hand to help you remember them.
1.     Let’s start with the pinkie finger – the pinkie reminds you of prophecy.  The Bible is the only work produced in which detailed prophecies relating to individuals and empires are given with amazing accuracy.  The book of Daniel is a great example as it gives such accurate prophecies that it looks like it was written after the events it predicts, but we have copies dating to before the events themselves proving that it was written earlier.  Also, there are 60 major prophecies that were fulfilled in the life of Jesus alone!  [add from Case for Christ]
2.     The second finger is your ring finger, and when married you wear a ring on that finger and what is often talked about during weddings is that the ring, as a circle, implies the unity that will be characteristic of your marriage; so the ring finger reminds us of unity.  The Bible has tremendous unity from front to back.  It’s comprised of 66 books by about 40 authors of radically different backgrounds (Luke the historian, David a shepherd who becomes a king, Joshua the General, Paul a Rabbi) writing in radically different times, places and social conditions, over a period of more than a millennium.  It covers a wide range of topics, many controversial (like “Who is God?” “What is man’s problem?” “How do we solve the problem?” “What is right and wrong?” etc), and displays a unique unity in its answers to these questions.  If you were to take answers to those questions from a range of people just in today’s culture and society, you would get a massive divergence of opinion on these questions…but the Biblical authors show striking unity. 
3.     Your next finger is your middle finger, your biggest finger, and it reminds us that the Bible answers the biggest questions of life in a way that fits with our observations of the world and is internally cohesive.  Many worldviews give answers to these big questions (questions about where we come from, why are we here, why is there evil and suffering etc) but what’s important is that the Biblical answers seem to fit the world the way we see it to be.  See all the previous Puzzle Pieces for detailed discussions on these points.  Not only does it provide answers to these questions, it predicts the problems!  The Biblical story tells us to expect pain and suffering, to expect noble people to do ignoble things, and offers an explanation for this that makes sense.
4.       Next is your index finger, and it reminds us that the Bible is an index to history: it is historically accurate.  Why is this important?  Well, if there is a book that claims to be from God, and it records God acting through history, it seems like God should get his history right.  Therefore, it’s important that we can go back to the Bible and find the cities, the cultures, the individuals that are recorded there.  Now it’s important to note that not everything recorded in the Bible has yet been attested to by outside historical sources.  Some of it probably never will be because some of the people or events it records aren’t the type of thing that leaves much physical evidence behind.  However, there is a mountain of evidence that supports huge amounts of the Biblical narrative.  For example, in their work I Don’t Have Enough Faith to be an Atheist, Geisler and Turek list 59 “historically confirmed/historically probable details” from the Gospel of John alone![4]  Luke, the author of both the Gospel bearing his name and the Book of Acts, is such a good historian that professor of New Testament and Archaeology John McRay has this to say:
the general consensus of both liberal and conservative scholars is that Luke is very accurate as a historian...he’s erudite, he’s accurate, his Greek approaches classical quality, he writes as an educated man, and archaeological discoveries are showing over and over again that Luke is accurate in what he has to say.[5]

More than this, part of what the Bible records are the words and deeds of Jesus of Nazareth.  As someone who claimed to be God, whose claim was vindicated by his being raised from the dead, his words have tremendous authority.  This is no ordinary man – this man is other worldly!  This is evidence that he is who he claimed to be: God in the flesh, come to bring salvation to all mankind.  (See Pieces 10 and 11 for more on the historical Jesus.)  This is a record of supernatural events!
5.     Finally, the thumb.  Remember in Ancient Rome how the emperor would put his thumb up if he wanted the gladiator to live?  What this reminds us of is that when people apply the things taught in the Bible they live!  They don’t just turn over a new leaf…they find real life!  When we respond to the message of the Gospels, and we put ourselves in God’s hands, he changes us in a way that we could never change ourselves.  We have the testimony of a transformed life.  It doesn’t matter if you’re rich or poor, educated or not, of high social standing or low, of whatever ethnic or cultural background; the truth of Christianity touches the lives of all human beings.  The Bible supernaturally changes lives!
6.     Now put all these fingers together into a fist and we have number six: this fist reminds us that the Bible is a fighter.  The Bible has survived through time and persecution.  Look at Matthew 24:35 where Jesus says that “heaven and earth shall pass away, but my words will not pass away” and Paul tells Timothy (2 Tim 2:9) that the Word of God cannot be imprisoned!  In the 18th Century, Voltaire declared that the Bible would be swept from existence in a hundred years...but it remains.  Ironically enough, 50 years after he died, the Geneva Bible Society used Voltaire’s own printing press and house to print stacks of Bibles!  (God does have a sense of humour...)  If this book is not the Word of God men would have destroyed it long ago. 

These six things form pretty good evidence in answering the first question of whether the Bible is merely a book from men about God, or a book from God to men.  It has the stamp of the supernatural.  Now this doesn’t prove that the Bible’s inspired, but it’s pretty good evidence that the Bible substantiates its own claim to divine authorship. 

2) Hasn’t the Bible been translated and re-translated?
But this claim really only applies to the originals, doesn’t it? And we don’t have the originals...so is what we have the real deal?  We’ll refer you back to Piece 10 to look at some of the aspects of the transmission of the Bible through the centuries, and just look at the issue of translations here.  After all, hasn’t the Bible been translated and re-translated over and over again?  Whenever someone asks you this question, you should always respond by asking them if they know how many times it’s been translated.  Chances are they won’t have the foggiest idea!  Would you like to know?  Once.  Just once.  Modern versions like the New International Version, the New American Standard, and the New King James are translations directly from the original language (Hebrew and Greek) into English.  It hasn’t gone from Greek to Latin to French to German to Swahili to English!  It goes directly from the original to English – one step of translation.  When looking at how these documents have been preserved over this period of time, the New Testament turns out to be 99.5% textually pure.  Of the 20,000 lines in the NT, only 40 are in doubt (about 400 words!), none of which affect any doctrine in a serious way.  This takes us back to our sixth point above, that God has supernaturally superintended the text.
 
3) The Bible was only written by men, and men make mistakes
The third objection above is that the Bible was only written by men and men make mistakes.  However, if we have been successful in demonstrating through the above points that it seems reasonable to believe that the Bible was not written merely by men, but by God in some fashion, the fact that humans are involved is no limitation to God.  After all, if I can make my dumb dog sit, isn’t it reasonable to hold that God can get humans to write what he wants?  It doesn’t matter who God used, if he’s involved it will turn out the way he wants.  But, even more importantly is the hidden assumption that’s in this objection.  Hidden within is the idea that because men make mistakes they must have made mistakes with the Bible.  But that doesn’t follow.  I’ve got heaps of books on my bookshelf that were written just by men, and I’ve no reason to simply throw them out because “men make mistakes”!

4) The Bible is just a matter of interpretation
Finally, the last objection is that the Bible is just a matter of interpretation.  This is often not a real objection, it’s just a way to dismiss the issue: “Oh that’s just your interpretation…mine is different.”  This is a strange objection, because basically what the person is saying is that you can read the text and make up your own meaning, that the author didn’t have a clear intent when he chose those particular words.  But this is not an idea that anyone applies to any other piece of writing in their life!  When they get a letter from their doctor spelling out the treatment for their condition they don’t believe they can just interpret those words in any way they like!  Similarly, when reading any book about any topic, they believe that the author had a specific intent and they read that book accordingly.  Why take a different approach to the Bible?  The Bible is historical records and personal correspondence (letters) primarily, so let’s read it like we read those kinds of things.   

Let’s just make a comment about certainty at this point.  Has what we’ve offered here shown with 100% certainty that the Bible is God’s word?  No.  But there is almost nothing in our lives that we can say with that degree of certainty.  If we are holding out for 100% before committing to a course of action we would find ourselves paralysed!  For example, I’m not 100% sure that the brake pads in my car are going to stop me when I put my foot on the brake pedal, but my past experiences with my car make it reasonable to act as though they will.  In the same way, the past 11 Puzzle Pieces give us enough confidence to believe that God exists, that Jesus was God himself, and that the Biblical material has been accurately handed down through the centuries.  When we add to this the points above, it seems perfectly reasonable to act as though the Bible contains more than just the words of men. 

One further objection that is sometimes raised against the authority of the Bible is that there are ‘lost’ books and that the Bible in its current form is incomplete.  In a piece entitled No Lost Books of the Bible, Greg Koukl tackles this idea and he says the Bible can be only one of two things: it’s either God’s supernatural words to men, or it’s a statement of beliefs of the leaders of Christianity.  If it’s the second, then the leaders at the time have the right to say “we believe in these things, but we don't believe these other things so throw them out because they don't reflect what we believe.”  Every group has the right to declare what they believe and what they don’t.  If this is what the Bible is then there are no ‘lost books’ because those books simply didn’t represent the beliefs of Christianity and they were discarded.  If it’s the first, God’s supernatural words to men, then it seems clear that God would be able to ensure that no parts of it are ‘lost’ as it travels through history.  Either way, it doesn’t seem that there can really be any ‘lost’ books. 

To finish, let’s offer this parting thought: almost everything we learn in our lives we learn from some reputable authority.  Very little of what we know we have actually discovered for ourselves.  Usually, we learn something from others and then put those things into practice ourselves to see how they play out.  Spiritual truths are no different!  The Bible has proven itself to be a reputable source, so start putting its directives into action and see if they lead you to a transformed life!



[1] Exodus 5:1
[2] Jeremiah 1:4
[3] 2 Timothy 3:16
[4] Geisler, N., and Turek, F., I Don’t Have Enough Faith to be an Atheist, Illinois: Crossway Books, 2004, pp. 263-268
[5] Cited in Strobel, Lee, The Case for Christ, Michigan: Zondervan, 1998, p129.