SEARCH THE SCRIPTURES SEARCH THE SCRIPTURES Volume 1 Genesis - Exodus by Cornelis Vanderwaal Translated by Theodore Plantinga PAIDEIA PRESS St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada Most of this material was originally published in Dutch under the title Sola Scriptura, © Oosterbaan & Le Cointre N.V. of Goes, The Netherlands. Copyright 1978 by J.H. Enterprises. © All rights reserved. Published by Paideia Press, P.O. Box 1450, St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada, L2R 7J8. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form without the written permission of the publisher. Bible quotations are taken from the Revised Standard Ver- sion unless otherwise indicated. ISBN 0-88815-021-0 Printed in the United States of America Table of Contents GOD'S WORD 1.By Scripture Alone 7 2.The Authority of the Bible 9 3.Biblical Manuscripts 13 4.Canonical and Apocryphal Writings 18 5.Biblical Criticism 25 6.Contradictions in the Bible? 32 7.The Unity of the Bible 39 8.Reading the Bible 46 GENESIS 1.The Book of the "Generations" 53 2.In the Beginning 55 3.The Toledoth of Heaven and Earth 58 4.The Toledoth of Adam (5-6:8) 64 5.The Toledoth of Noah (6:9-9:29) 66 6.The Toledoth of the Sons of Noah (10-11:9) 70 7.The Toledoth of Shem (11:10-26) 71 8.The Toledoth of Terah (11:27-25:11) 72 9.The Toledoth of Ishmael (25:12-18) 83 10.The Toledoth of Isaac (25:19-35:29) 84 11.The Toledoth of Esau (36-37:1) 92 12.The Toledoth of Jacob (37:2-50:26) 94 EXODUS 1.The Book of Israel's First Deliverance 103 2.The Struggle Begins 106 3.Deliverance through Divine Judgment 111 4.Across the Red Sea and the Wilderness 115 5.Israel at Sinai 121 6.The Book of the Covenant 126 7.The Covenant Ceremony 129 8.The Tabernacle 131 9. The Covenant Broken and Renewed 138 INDEX 145 God's Word 1. By Scripture Alone The Book of books. In Article 7 of the Belgic Confession (1561), we read: "We believe that these Holy Scriptures fully contain the will of God and teach sufficiently all that man must believe if he is to be saved." This confession also declares that "The whole manner of worship which God requires of us is written in them at large." If this is also our confession, we must live by Scripture alone. The Bible is all we need. But why? Christianity is not the only religion based on sacred writings. Why do we accept the Bible and reject the Koran, the Edda, and the holy books of India? Why do we push aside all those other books, which certainly contain a great deal of wisdom, and focus our attention on that one "book of books"? I have no other answer to offer than this: the Bible itself claims to be the sole revelation of God. And faith accepts this claim. Faith's acceptance is based on the Bible's testimony about itself. The Scriptures claim to reveal the will of God to us; they are a lamp shedding light on our path. Woe to the man God's Word 7 who adds anything to the Scriptures or takes anything away from them. We live by Scripture alone. Sola Scrip- tural The Reformation. The sixteenth-century struggle be- tween Rome and the Reformation revolved around this very point. Is the Bible to be regarded as the sole authority, or is there some other authority in addition? Can tradition or the church fathers or church councils or papal decrees be accepted as authoritative alongside the Scriptures? The Roman Catholic Church did in fact put Scripture on a par with tradition. Indeed, Rome accepted the Bible because it was accepted by the church. Thus the authority of the Scriptures was made dependent on tradition and the authority of the church. Yet the Reformation clung firmly to Scripture alone, confessing that the Bible is completely authoritative, suf- ficient in itself, clear, and indispensable. When people within "Protestant" circles began to question this doctrine and chip away at it, the Reformers stubbornly held their ground. The Anabaptists, for example, elevated the "inner light" above the "dead letter" of Scripture. Anyone who received special, direct revelations from God was a prophet, someone to be listened to. The "Spirit" gives life, it was argued, while the "letter" of the Bible kills. The Reformers saw clearly that this way of thinking represents false teaching. Therefore they rejected it wherever they encountered it. The Canons of Dordt (for- mulated by a Dutch Reformed synod of 1618-19) declared that the assurance enjoyed by God's elect that they will persevere in their faith "is not produced by any peculiar revelation contrary to or independent of the Word of God, but springs from faith in God's promises, which He has most abundantly revealed in His Word for our comfort" (V, 10). 8 God's Word We live by the Bible alone. It is there that we are instruc- ted in "the whole manner of worship which God requires of us." Is that also your confession? Do you accept the Scriptures as God's infallible Word? Has the Bible proven itself to you? Do you hear the Creator and Redeemer speaking to you in the Bible? 2. The Authority of the Bible The real author. Scripture is inspired by God Himself (II Tim. 3:16). It comes to us not at man's instigation or initiative but because men were moved by the Holy Spirit to speak "from God" (II Pet. 1:21). This does not mean that we must regard the writers of the Bible as robots or scribes taking dictation. No, God uses living human beings in His service. He even allows them a major role in giving shape to the Word He speaks to mankind. The individuality of the Bible's human authors comes through clearly, even though God Himself is the real author of Scripture. To recognize the role of certain human beings in writing the books that make up our Bible is not to say that there are errors and contradictions in the Bible. We are not to declare that God's Word is in the Bible—in and among all those words written by human beings. The Bible is God's authoritative Word—that's our point of departure. Authoritative. Because we have received the Bible from the hand of the King of kings, we must accept it as authoritative. We must bow unconditionally to the Voice that speaks to us in the Bible. We may not argue that we live in a different time and a different society—as though this has something to do with our attitude toward the Bible. And we may not declare that the authoritative God's Word 9 language of the Bible was binding only as long as Christ's apostles walked the earth. The Bible's authority is not time-bound. Scripture is God's Word for a thousand generations. Even though the people of our time feel uneasy whenever the word authority is used, we must subject ourselves willingly to the authority of God's Word. Complete. The confession "By Scripture alone" means that the Bible is no longer open to correction through later revelations. There is no continuing Scriptural revelation in our dispensation. The Lord has already revealed all that we need to know. The Bible is complete. We must not try to "go beyond what is written" (I Cor. 4:6). To "go beyond" would be to depart from the teaching of the Christ (II John, vs. 9). We need not await a "fifth gospel." What we have already been told about Christ is all we need in order to know God and serve Him effectively. No eye has seen, no ear has heard, no mind has conceived what God has prepared for those who love him (I Cor. 2:9; Is. 64:4). The Spirit of truth. Today there are many Christians (especially in liberal circles) who do believe in continuing revelation. The Bible is not the only "scripture" they venerate; they find traces of divine inspiration in other documents and writing as well. Such views clearly violate Scripture's own intent. God's Word leaves no room for any other "word" of com- parable authority. There are certain other Christians who make a point of declaring that they accept the Bible's authority wholehear- tedly—but they still wind up undermining it. They like to point to John 16:13, where Christ tells His apostles: "When the Spirit of truth comes, he will guide you into all the truth." On the basis of this text they await a new 10 God's Word
Description: