scarylarrywolf
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- May 3, 2002
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Yes, Tom, men wrote it -- but God inspired men to write it. The Bible testifies about this itself: "All Scripture is given by inspiration of God". Yes it has been translated many times, and some expressions used in it lose their entire meaning because they were unique to the culture the men God inspired to write it came from (we have our own expressions today that other cultures find difficult to translate, such as "the apple of my eye"). But the Bible's principles are repeated over and over again, many times by different human "authors", many of whom knew Jesus Christ while He was on Earth, and knew each other. Why would they write contradictory works of each other in the first place, let alone writing in accordance with God's inspiration?
I sincerely doubt that the Creator of the Universe Who inspired men to write down His Words is stupid enough to let those words lose their basic meaning. People are not flipant and irrational when it comes to translating -- why should we be given to the pessimistic assumption that people have screwed up God's infallible Word by translating it?! The original basic message is as clear as it was in English today as it was 2000 years ago. God is "the same yesterday, today, and tomorrow", and He would not deceive mankind by letting His Testimony be changed.
I sincerely doubt that the Creator of the Universe Who inspired men to write down His Words is stupid enough to let those words lose their basic meaning. People are not flipant and irrational when it comes to translating -- why should we be given to the pessimistic assumption that people have screwed up God's infallible Word by translating it?! The original basic message is as clear as it was in English today as it was 2000 years ago. God is "the same yesterday, today, and tomorrow", and He would not deceive mankind by letting His Testimony be changed.