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Week 3 THE MOST IMPORTANT BOOK

Posted on June 15, 2026 by Jessica Davis

Many worldviews have sacred texts, but the Bible stands out because of its influence on history, culture, morality, literature, law, and personal identity. It is the most translated, printed, studied, quoted, challenged, and enduring book in history.

And the question every believer must be able to answer is this:

Can we trust the Bible?

This is an important question. If the Bible cannot be trusted, Christianity loses its foundation. But if the Bible is reliable, then Christianity stands on solid ground.

This week, we’ll explore why the Bible is reliable in terms of history, its text, and prophecy. We’ll also learn how to respond to a common objection: “The Bible has been changed.”

The Bible clearly describes its own nature, so before we look at outside evidence, we need to understand what Scripture says about itself. In 2 Timothy 3:16, Paul writes that “all Scripture is God-breathed,” meaning the words come from God, not just human ideas or culture. Human authors wrote with the Holy Spirit’s guidance, so the Bible carries God’s authority, not just human opinion. Scripture claims to be completely trustworthy, as Psalm 119:160 says, “The sum of Your word is truth,” showing that God’s message is consistent and dependable from start to finish. Jesus also affirmed this view. He quoted the Old Testament as accurate, binding, and inspired, and in John 10:35, He said, “Scripture cannot be broken,” highlighting its reliability. If Jesus, the risen Lord and Son of God, trusted the Scriptures, then His followers should have the same confidence. Our trust in the Bible is based on what Scripture and Jesus Himself say, not just tradition or preference.


MANUSCRIPT EVIDENCE: HAS THE BIBLE BEEN COPIED ACCURATELY?

The idea that “the Bible has been changed over time” does not hold up when we look at the manuscript evidence. The New Testament has more support than any other ancient work: over 5,800 Greek manuscripts, 10,000 Latin, and 9,300 early translations, totaling more than 20,000. No other ancient text comes close. For example, Plato’s works survive in 7 manuscripts (with a 1,200-year gap), Aristotle’s in 49 manuscripts (with a 1,400-year gap), and Homer’s Iliad in 643 manuscripts (with a 500-year gap). In contrast, the earliest New Testament copies date to just 30 to 100 years after the originals, allowing scholars to compare thousands of copies and reconstruct the text with great accuracy. The New Testament is the best-attested document from the ancient world.

The Old Testament shows the same remarkable preservation. Jewish scribes copied Scripture with extreme precision—counting letters, checking middle words, and destroying any scroll with errors. Critics once argued that the text must have changed because the oldest complete manuscripts dated to A.D. 1000. That changed in 1947 with the discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls, which contain texts 1,000 years older. When compared to the later Masochistic Text, they were over 95% identical, with remaining differences limited to spelling or minor stylistic variations—none affecting meaning. The Old and New Testament manuscripts together show a history of preservation that is unmatched in the ancient world. The large number of copies, their closeness to the originals, their wide distribution, and the careful work of scribes all show that the Scriptures we have today closely match the original writings. Rather than changing over time, the Bible has been carefully preserved through the centuries and across cultures. Manuscript evidence not only supports the Bible’s reliability, it also shows the great care God has taken to protect His Word.

ARCHAEOLOGY: DOES HISTORY SUPPORT THE BIBLE?

Archaeology cannot confirm every detail in the Bible, but it often supports the Bible’s historical and cultural accuracy. For over two hundred years, digs in the Middle East have found cities, inscriptions, and artifacts that match what the Bible describes. Many discoveries that people thought would disprove the Bible have actually confirmed it. While archaeology cannot prove miracles, it does support the historical setting of the biblical story.

The Hittites

For centuries, skeptics claimed the Hittites were fictional because no evidence existed outside the Bible. That changed when archaeologists uncovered Hittite cities, archives, and artifacts across Turkey and Syria, revealing a major empire exactly where Scripture places it. The Hittites now stand as a classic example of biblical claims later confirmed.

King David

Some argued David was legendary until the 1993 discovery of the Tel Dan Stele, a ninth-century B.C. inscription referring to the “House of David.” This external, non-biblical evidence confirms David as a real historical king and validates the biblical dynasty.

Pontius Pilate

Critics once questioned Pilate’s existence. Then in 1961, the Pilate Stone was found in Caesarea, naming him as Prefect of Judea. This inscription directly supports the New Testament’s political details.

Jericho

Excavations at ancient Jericho revealed: walls collapsed outward (unusual for siege warfare), evidence of burning, intact grain stores, indicating a swift conquest. These features align closely with the account in Joshua 6, even though scholars continue to debate precise dating.

Luke’s Accuracy

Luke, author of the Gospel and Acts, has been repeatedly vindicated by archaeology. Scholars have identified 84 confirmed historical details in Luke and 35 in Acts, including accurate political titles, geography, and cultural practices. Sir William Ramsay, once a skeptic, concluded Luke is a “historian of the first rank.” His writings demonstrate intimate knowledge of the first-century world.

Additional Confirmations

Archaeology has also verified: ancient Nineveh and the Assyrian Empire; the Cyrus Cylinder, supporting the return from exile; inscriptions naming Nebuchadnezzar, Belshazzar, and Sennacherib; New Testament sites such as the Pool of Siloam, the Pool of Bethesda, and the Capernaum synagogue; first-century Galilean fishing boats, including the “Jesus Boat.”

Why This Matters

Christianity is based on real history. If the Bible’s historical background were unreliable, its teachings would be less convincing. But archaeology keeps showing that the biblical writers understood their world well. The Bible is not a myth or legend; it is based on real people, real places, and real events.

Archaeology does not replace faith, but it powerfully reinforces it. Far from undermining the Bible, archaeological discoveries have strengthened confidence in Scripture and highlighted the remarkable reliability of God’s Word.

PROPHECY: THE BIBLE FORETELLS THE FUTURE WITH PRECISION

One of the strongest proofs that the Bible is inspired by God is its fulfilled prophecies. No other religious text has as many specific and historically verified predictions. The Bible often says that God “declares the end from the beginning,” and history backs this up. Fulfilled prophecy is not just a small part of the Bible—it appears throughout and shows a level of accuracy that cannot be explained naturally.

Messianic Prophecies

The Old Testament contains over 300 prophecies about the Messiah—His ancestry, birthplace, ministry, suffering, death, and resurrection. Written by different authors across centuries, these prophecies converge precisely in Jesus Christ. Examples include:

Bethlehem as His birthplace (Micah 5:2)

Virgin birth (Isaiah 7:14)

Betrayal for thirty pieces of silver (Zechariah 11:12)

Pierced hands and feet, divided garments, and lots cast for clothing (Psalm 22)

Burial in a rich man’s tomb (Isaiah 53:9)

Resurrection (Psalm 16:10)

These are not vague predictions; they are specific and can be checked against history.

Mathematician Peter Stoner estimated that the chance of one person fulfilling just eight of these prophecies is 1 in 10¹⁷, which is like picking a marked coin from a pile two feet deep covering Texas. Jesus fulfilled hundreds of prophecies. This suggests it was not a coincidence, but that a divine Author was guiding history.

Prophecies About Nations

The Bible also foretells events involving empires and rulers:

Babylon’s fall and the rise of Cyrus, named 150 years before his birth (Isaiah 44–45).

Tyre’s destruction, including its rubble being thrown into the sea (Ezekiel 26), fulfilled by Alexander the Great.

The rise and fall of Persia, Greece, and Rome, described in Daniel with such clarity that critics once assumed the book was written after the fact—yet evidence shows it predates these events.

These prophecies are detailed, tied to specific times, and have been confirmed by history.

Prophecies About Israel

Scripture predicted that Israel would be scattered among the nations, remain a distinct people, and eventually return to its land.

History has fulfilled each of these. After A.D. 70, Israel was scattered for almost two thousand years but never lost its identity, which is unique in history. In 1948, Israel became a nation again, fulfilling ancient prophecies in a very literal way. This is one of the most powerful examples of modern prophecy coming true.

Why Prophecy Matters

People cannot predict the future accurately, but the Bible does so again and again. Its fulfilled prophecies support its historical claims and strengthen its message. If the Bible is right about kings, nations, and events far in the future, we have good reason to trust what it says about salvation, judgment, and eternal life.

Prophecy is not just evidence; it is also an invitation. The God who kept His promises in the past will keep them in the future. The Messiah who came once will return. The same God who guided history invites everyone to trust Him.

CANON FORMATION: HOW DID WE GET THE BIBLE?

Many people think the Bible was put together by political councils or leaders seeking power. In reality, the biblical canon was not created by the church but recognized by God’s people over time. The canon developed gradually, as inspired writings were identified by their authority from God, not by human decision. Both the Old and New Testaments were widely accepted as Scripture long before any council met.

The Old Testament

The Old Testament canon developed within Israel’s own history. Moses’ writings were seen as Scripture from the start—they were preserved, read in public, and treated as God’s Word. Later prophetic books were added with the same authority. Jewish scribes carefully copied and preserved these texts, and by the time of Jesus, the Old Testament (Law, Prophets, Writings) was a complete and authoritative collection. Jesus confirmed this canon many times, saying that “Scripture cannot be broken.” The Old Testament was recognized, not created, long before the church began.

The New Testament

The New Testament was recognized in the same way. As soon as the apostles wrote their letters and accounts, they were treated as Scripture. Paul told churches to read his letters in public, and Peter called Paul’s writings “Scripture.” Early Christians valued, copied, and shared these writings because they came from eyewitnesses chosen by the risen Christ.

The early church used four natural criteria to recognize inspired books:

Apostolic authority — written by an apostle or close associate

Orthodoxy — consistent with Jesus’ teaching and the Old Testament

Universal acceptance — widely used across the church

Inspiration — bearing the marks of the Spirit’s voice

These criteria were not created by councils; they showed the church’s desire to keep true apostolic teaching.

What Councils Actually Did

Despite common myths, Constantine and the Council of Nicaea did not choose the books of the Bible. By A.D. 325, almost all New Testament books were already widely accepted. Later councils did not create the canon; they simply confirmed what the church already recognized. Their job was to affirm, not to select.

Why Other Writings Were Excluded

The so-called “lost gospels” or Gnostic texts were written in the second or third century, long after the apostles. They were not written by apostles, went against Jesus’ teaching, and were never widely accepted. They were left out not because of suppression, but because they did not meet the authenticity tests. The church was not hiding the truth; it was protecting it.

The Result

The Bible we have today is the same Bible used by the early church. No essential doctrine has changed, no core teaching has been lost, and no major truth has been altered. Manuscript evidence, early church writings, and liturgical use all confirm this continuity. The canon is stable because it was never a human invention—it was a divine revelation recognized by God’s people.

Knowing how the canon was formed helps us trust Scripture more. The Bible is not the result of politics, but of God speaking, preserving, and guiding His people to recognize His Word. When we open the Bible, we are reading God’s Word, faithfully preserved and passed down through generations.

ANSWERING THE OBJECTION: “THE BIBLE HAS BEEN CHANGED.”

This is one of the most common objections you will hear, and it can sound intimidating until you look at the evidence. When you do, the claim falls apart quickly. Here’s how to respond clearly, confidently, and graciously.

1. “We have more manuscripts than any ancient text.” The Bible is supported by an overwhelming amount of manuscript evidence—over 20,000 handwritten copies of the New Testament alone. No other ancient document even comes close. This massive manuscript base allows scholars to compare copies from different regions and time periods, identify variations, and reconstruct the original text with over 99.5% accuracy. When someone claims the Bible has been changed, the sheer volume and consistency of manuscripts stand as a powerful answer: the Bible is the best-preserved ancient document in human history.

2. “The differences are minor.” Critics often point to “thousands of differences” between manuscripts, but these differences are overwhelmingly trivial—things like spelling variations, word-order shifts, or the use of synonyms. These do not change the meaning of the text, and they certainly do not affect any Christian doctrine. There is not a single core belief—about Jesus, salvation, the Trinity, sin, or the gospel—that depends on a disputed reading. The variations show human scribes at work, not a corrupted message.

3. “The Dead Sea Scrolls prove the Old Testament was copied accurately.” Before 1947, the oldest complete Old Testament manuscripts we had were from around A.D. 1000. Critics argued that centuries of copying must have introduced major changes. Then the Dead Sea Scrolls were discovered—manuscripts 1,000 years older. When scholars compared them to later copies, they found the text to be over 95% identical word-for-word, with the remaining 5% consisting of spelling differences or minor stylistic variations. No doctrines changed. This discovery proved that the Old Testament had been copied with extraordinary precision across a millennium.

4. “The early church quoted Scripture extensively.” Even if every manuscript were somehow lost, we could still reconstruct almost the entire New Testament from the writings of early Christian leaders. Pastors, theologians, and apologists in the first few centuries quoted Scripture so frequently in sermons, letters, and debates that the text of the New Testament is essentially preserved in their writings. This means the Bible was widely known, widely used, and widely trusted long before any council ever discussed it.

5. “The Bible has been translated, not transformed.” Some people confuse translation differences with textual corruption. But translations reflect language updates, not changes to the message. Whether you read the ESV, NIV, KJV, CSB, or any other faithful translation, the core meaning remains the same. Translators work from the earliest and most reliable manuscripts available, ensuring that modern readers receive the same message the early church received. The Bible has been translated into thousands of languages—but its substance has not been altered.

6. “No doctrine depends on a disputed text.” This is one of the most important truths to understand. Even in the small number of places where scholars debate the exact wording, no essential Christian doctrine is affected. The deity of Christ, the resurrection, salvation by grace, the Trinity, the authority of Scripture—all of these truths are taught repeatedly and clearly across the Bible. The message of Scripture is consistent across all manuscripts, all traditions, and all translations.

Here’s a simple and confident summary you can use: “We can trust the Bible because we have more manuscripts, earlier manuscripts, and more accurate manuscripts than any ancient text. The message has not changed.”

WHY THIS MATTERS FOR YOUR FAITH

The reliability of the Bible is not an abstract academic question, nor is it a topic reserved for scholars, historians, or theologians. It is a profoundly personal issue that touches the very core of Christian faith. If Scripture is truly the Word of God—accurate, trustworthy, preserved, and inspired—then every promise it contains stands firm, every command carries authority, every warning deserves attention, and every hope it offers is anchored in reality. But if the Bible is unreliable, if it is merely a human book filled with errors, myths, or distortions, then Christianity collapses under its own weight. The Christian faith is not built on vague spirituality or moral philosophy; it is built on the conviction that God has spoken, that His Word is true, and that His revelation is trustworthy. This is why the reliability of Scripture matters so deeply. It is not a side issue. It is the foundation upon which everything else rests.

If the Bible is reliable, then God’s promises are trustworthy. The promises of Scripture are not sentimental wishes or poetic aspirations; they are declarations from the God who cannot lie. When God says He will never leave you or forsake you, that promise is as solid as the character of the One who made it. When He promises forgiveness to all who repent, that forgiveness is not theoretical—it is guaranteed. When He promises to work all things together for good, that assurance is not fragile optimism but divine certainty. The reliability of Scripture means that every promise God has made—to comfort the brokenhearted, to strengthen the weary, to guide the humble, to save the repentant, to raise the dead, and to establish His kingdom—stands unshaken. A reliable Bible means a reliable God, and a reliable God means a faith that can withstand storms, doubts, and suffering.

If the Bible is reliable, then Jesus’ words are true. Jesus did not speak as a philosopher offering opinions; He spoke as the Son of God, revealing truth. He claimed to be the way, the truth, and the life. He promised eternal life to those who believe in Him. He warned of judgment, offered forgiveness, and declared that His words would never pass away. If Scripture is trustworthy, then everything Jesus said about Himself, about salvation, about the Father, about the Spirit, about heaven and hell, and about the future is true. His teachings are not suggestions; they are divine revelation. His commands are not optional; they are authoritative. His promises are not symbolic; they are certain. A reliable Bible means a reliable Christ, and a reliable Christ means a faith rooted in the unchanging truth of God’s Son.

If the Bible is reliable, then salvation is secure. The gospel is not a human invention or a religious myth; it is the revealed plan of God to redeem humanity through the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ. Scripture declares that salvation is by grace through faith, not by works. It promises that those who trust in Christ are forgiven, justified, adopted, and sealed by the Holy Spirit. If the Bible is trustworthy, then your salvation does not depend on your feelings, your performance, or your circumstances. It depends on the finished work of Christ and the unchanging promises of God. A reliable Bible means you can rest in the assurance that nothing can separate you from the love of God in Christ Jesus.

If the Bible is reliable, then morality is grounded. In a world where moral standards shift with cultural trends, personal preferences, or political ideologies, Scripture provides an unchanging foundation for right and wrong. The commands of God are not arbitrary rules; they reflect His holy character and His design for human flourishing. If the Bible is trustworthy, then we have a clear, objective standard for ethics, justice, sexuality, relationships, and human dignity. We are not left to navigate life by instinct or cultural pressure. We have a moral compass rooted in the eternal truth of God’s Word. A reliable Bible means a reliable foundation for living a life that honors God and blesses others.

If the Bible is reliable, then hope is real. The hope of the Christian faith is not wishful thinking; it is anchored in the promises of God revealed in Scripture. The Bible promises that Christ will return, that evil will be defeated, that justice will prevail, that the dead will be raised, and that God will make all things new. These are not symbolic ideas or comforting metaphors; they are future realities guaranteed by the God who has already fulfilled His Word in history. If Scripture is trustworthy, then the hope of heaven is certain, the promise of resurrection is secure, and the assurance of eternal life is unshakable. A reliable Bible means a reliable hope—one that sustains us through suffering, strengthens us in trials, and anchors us in the storms of life.

But if the Bible is unreliable, then Christianity collapses. If Scripture is filled with errors, contradictions, or myths, then we have no basis for trusting its promises, believing its doctrines, or following its commands. If the Bible is not true, then we cannot know who God is, what He requires, or how we can be saved. If the Bible is unreliable, then Jesus’ claims cannot be trusted, the gospel loses its foundation, and the Christian faith becomes nothing more than a human invention. Everything depends on the reliability of Scripture. This is why skeptics attack the Bible so fiercely—because if they can undermine its authority, they can undermine the entire Christian worldview. But the evidence does not support their objections. In fact, the evidence overwhelmingly confirms the reliability of Scripture.

The Bible is the most historically reliable book in the ancient world. It has more manuscripts, earlier manuscripts, and more accurate manuscripts than any other ancient text. Archaeology repeatedly confirms its historical claims. Prophecy demonstrates its divine origin. The formation of the canon shows that the church did not invent Scripture but recognized it. The preservation of the text across centuries reveals God’s faithfulness in safeguarding His Word. The internal coherence of the Bible—written over 1,500 years by more than 40 authors in multiple cultures and languages—testifies to a divine Author guiding the entire story. No other book in history has been examined, attacked, scrutinized, or challenged as intensely as the Bible, and yet no other book has stood the test of time so powerfully.

This matters for your faith because it means you can trust the Scriptures with all your heart. You don’t have to worry that new discoveries will disprove the Bible or that hidden manuscripts will change Christian beliefs. The Bible you have is the same one that shaped the early church, changed nations, comforted believers for centuries, and revealed God to His people throughout history. You can build your life on it, trust it for eternity, and rely on it completely.

In the end, the reliability of Scripture is not just an intellectual idea—it is a spiritual anchor. When you open the Bible, you are hearing God’s voice. When you trust its promises, you are standing on solid truth. When you follow its commands, you are living in the wisdom of your Creator. When you put your hope in its message, you are trusting in things that will last forever. The Bible is reliable. The evidence is strong. Because of this, your faith can be confident, courageous, and secure.

PRACTICAL APPLICATION: HOW TO LIVE IN LIGHT OF A RELIABLE BIBLE

If the Bible is reliable in history, prophecy, preservation, and inspiration, it should not just be an idea—it should be the foundation of your daily life. The reliability of Scripture is not just something to know, but something to live out. When you believe the Bible is truly God’s Word, it changes how you think, make decisions, face hard times, resist temptation, interact with culture, and follow Christ. A trustworthy Bible calls for a changed life. It asks you to move from confidence to obedience, from knowing to doing, from belief to discipleship. The following applications come naturally from what you’ve learned: if God has spoken, His Word should be your main authority, comfort, and guide.

First, a reliable Bible means you can build your life on God’s promises with unshakable confidence. When Scripture says God will never leave you, you can cling to that truth in seasons of loneliness. When it says He forgives your sins, you can silence the voice of shame. When it says He works all things for good, you can trust Him in confusion. When it says He will finish the work He began in you, you can persevere through weakness. The promises of God are not fragile hopes; they are guaranteed realities. A reliable Bible means you can pray with boldness, endure with patience, and hope with certainty because the God who speaks in Scripture is faithful to every word He has spoken.

Second, a reliable Bible calls you to submit your life to Jesus’ teachings with joyful obedience. If Jesus’ words are true, then His commands are not optional suggestions—they are the path to life. His teachings about forgiveness, humility, purity, generosity, prayer, and love are not burdens but blessings. They are the wisdom of God for the flourishing of your soul. A reliable Bible means you cannot treat Scripture as a buffet, choosing the parts you like and ignoring the parts that challenge you. Instead, you learn to trust that God’s ways are better than your instincts, His commands wiser than your desires, and His truth more reliable than cultural trends. Obedience becomes an act of worship, not obligation.

Third, a reliable Bible gives you the courage to stand firm in a shifting culture. When society changes its moral standards, Scripture remains steady. When the world pressures you to compromise, Scripture anchors you. When people mock biblical truth, Scripture strengthens you. A reliable Bible means you do not have to be tossed by every new ideology or intimidated by every cultural wave. You can speak truth with grace, hold convictions with humility, and live with integrity because your foundation is not public opinion but the eternal Word of God. This kind of courage is not loud or combative—it is quiet, steady, and rooted in confidence that God’s truth will outlast every cultural moment.

Fourth, a reliable Bible equips you to face suffering with hope. When trials come—and they will—the reliability of Scripture becomes a lifeline. You can endure grief knowing God is near to the brokenhearted. You can endure uncertainty knowing God holds your future. You can endure loss knowing Christ has conquered death. You can endure pain knowing God uses suffering to refine your faith. A reliable Bible means your hope is not based on circumstances but on the character of God and the promises of His Word. This is why persecuted believers throughout history clung to Scripture—they knew it was the only unshakable truth in a world of instability.

Fifth, a reliable Bible calls you to immerse yourself in Scripture daily. If the Bible is truly God’s Word, then reading it is not a religious duty—it is a privilege. It is the voice of your Shepherd, the wisdom of your Father, the comfort of your Savior, and the guidance of the Spirit. A reliable Bible means you prioritize Scripture over social media, news cycles, and cultural noise. You read it not to check a box but to know God, hear His voice, and shape your heart. You meditate on it, memorize it, pray through it, and let it form your worldview. The more you saturate your mind with Scripture, the more you will think, speak, and live like Christ.

Sixth, a reliable Bible empowers you to share your faith with confidence. You do not have to fear questions about the Bible’s accuracy or reliability. You do not have to avoid conversations about history, archaeology, prophecy, or manuscript evidence. You can speak with clarity and conviction because the evidence is overwhelmingly on the side of Scripture. A reliable Bible means you can tell others, without hesitation, that Christianity is not blind faith—it is reasonable, historical, and grounded in truth. This confidence does not make you arrogant; it makes you compassionate. You share the gospel not as a personal opinion but as God’s revealed truth for all people.

Seventh, a reliable Bible calls you to align your moral decisions with God’s standards. In a world where morality is often subjective, fluid, or self-defined, Scripture provides a clear and unchanging foundation. A reliable Bible means you do not determine right and wrong based on feelings, trends, or convenience. You let God’s Word shape your ethics, your relationships, your sexuality, your finances, your speech, and your priorities. This kind of moral clarity is not restrictive—it is liberating. It frees you from the confusion of cultural relativism and anchors you in the wisdom of God.

Eighth, a reliable Bible invites you to trust God with your future. Prophecy shows that God knows the end from the beginning. History shows that He fulfills His Word. Preservation shows that He guards His revelation. A reliable Bible means your future is not uncertain—it is held in the hands of a sovereign God who has already demonstrated His faithfulness across centuries. You can face tomorrow without fear because the God who kept His Word in the past will keep His Word in your life.

Finally, a reliable Bible calls you to worship with awe and gratitude. When you realize that the God of the universe has spoken, preserved His Word, fulfilled His promises, and revealed His heart, you cannot remain indifferent. You worship because Scripture reveals a God who is faithful, powerful, wise, and good. You worship because the Bible is not just a book—it is a gift. You worship because the God who inspired Scripture invites you into relationship with Him through His Son. A reliable Bible leads to a life of reverence, joy, and devotion.

In the end, the reliability of Scripture is not just an argument—it is a call to change. It means you can trust God completely, obey Him with joy, stand firm with courage, face suffering with hope, read Scripture eagerly, share the gospel boldly, live with integrity, look to the future with confidence, and worship with passion. The Bible is reliable. The evidence is clear. Because the Bible is reliable, your faith can be strong, steady, and firmly rooted in God’s eternal truth.

THE BIBLE IS TRUSTWORTHY, BEAUTIFUL, AND TRUE

The Bible is not a myth, a legend, or a religious artifact changed by politics or power. It is not based on superstition, imagination, or human manipulation. The Bible stands alone in the ancient world: it is grounded in history, preserved in its text, supported by archaeology, proven by prophecy, and changes lives spiritually. All the evidence points to the same conclusion: the Scriptures are exactly what they claim to be—the inspired, authoritative, and trustworthy Word of the living God.

History confirms it. Archaeology supports it. Manuscript evidence backs it up. Prophecy proves it. Jesus’ own testimony seals it. The Bible is not fragile; it is strong. It has survived empires, persecution, wars, skepticism, and centuries of examination. Kings tried to destroy it. Critics tried to hide it. Cultures tried to silence it. Yet it remains—unchanged in its message, unmatched in its influence, and unequaled in its reliability. No other book has shaped civilizations, changed hearts, or lasted like Scripture. Its survival is not by chance; it is by God’s plan.

Because the Bible is based in real history, you can trust that its stories are about real events, people, and places. Because it has been carefully preserved, you can be sure the words you read today are the same as those read by the early church. Because archaeology supports it, you can know its cultural and historical claims match the evidence found in the ground. Because prophecy has come true, you can be certain that God, who knows the future, is in control of history. And because it changes lives, you can experience the power of God’s Word to convict, comfort, renew, and restore.

This matters for your faith because it means you are not building your life on something unstable. You are building on the solid rock of God’s revelation. When you open the Bible, you are not reading human guesses—you are hearing God’s voice. When you trust its promises, you are holding onto the truth that will not fail. When you follow its commands, you are living in the wisdom of your Creator. When you share its message, you are giving the world the only hope that saves.

This week is not about learning academic arguments or memorizing facts. It is about building your confidence in Scripture so your faith is strong. It is about growing your love for God’s Word, so it becomes your daily bread, your guide, your anchor in hard times, and your compass when you are confused. It is about helping you answer questions with clarity and kindness—not to win arguments, but to point people to the truth that brings freedom.

The Bible is reliable. The Bible is inspired. The Bible is God’s Word. Because of this, you can trust it with your whole life—your past, present, future, salvation, decisions, relationships, calling, and eternity. The God who created everything has spoken in Scripture, and His Word lasts forever. Build your life on it. Stand firm in it. Enjoy it. Defend it with confidence and kindness. Let it shape you to reflect the truth, beauty, and faithfulness of the God who gave it.

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