Below is a summary of what I was taught in Seminary about the Inspiration of Scripture. In the next few posts, I will question and critique the information below.
I’m going to say some challenging things, so make sure you subscribe to the RSS feed.
Definition of Inspiration of Scripture
(Get on your thinking hats). The formal definition of inspiration is:
That work of the Holy Spirit in guiding human authors to compose and record through their personalities God’s selected message without error in the words of the original documents.
Another popular definition is:
God superintending human authors so that, using their own personalities, they composed and recorded without error his message in the words of the original manuscripts.
Meaning of “Inspiration”
The phrase “Inspiration of Scripture” comes primarily from 2 Timothy 3:16 which says “All Scripture is given by inspiration of God…”
The English word “inspiration” comes from the Latin inspirate which is a translation of the Greek word theopneustos. The most literal translation of theopneustos might be “God-breathed.”
Explanation of Inspiration of Scripture
Aside from 2 Timothy 3:16, another key text is 2 Peter 1:21 which indicates that men of God were moved, carried, or driven by the Holy Spirit to write Scripture.
Many also use 1 Corinthians 2:12-13 to defend Inspiration, which talks about expressing spiritual truths with spiritual words taught not by human wisdom, but by the Spirit of God.
The authors were not passive instruments, mechanically recording what God dictated, but the Spirit used their personalities and individuality in the process of writing Scripture. This is why different books of the Bible which are written by different authors have different tones, vocabularies, thought patterns, and sentence structure.
Note that some of the authors (such as Jeremiah and Paul) used an amenuensis (a secretory, or scribe) to record what the words they spoke (cf. Rom 16:22; Gal 6:11).
Extent of Inspiration of Scripture
Inspiration extends only to the written words of the Bible. It refers not only to the Bible as a whole, but to every sentence, word, and even down to the individual letters (cf. Matt 5:18; Gal 3:16).
Inspiration only applies to the original manuscripts which were penned by the original authors. No Greek or Hebrew text that exists today, nor any English translation is inspired.
Importance of Inspiration of Scripture
If we are to follow the instruction of Jesus in living according to every word of God (Matt 4:4), we need to know with certainty and accuracy what the words of God are.
Since our daily decisions and actions as followers of Jesus depend on the meaning and application of individual words of Scripture, it is necessary to know that the words themselves are also inspired.
Ward Kelly on Facebook says
Interested to see you flesh this out…
Jeremy Myers on Facebook says
Oh, that was a really old post that having some problems on my blog, so I unpublished it then republished it, and it got sent here to facebook. If you look here, you can see some of these old posts: https://redeeminggod.com/theological/bibliology/
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Joseph Collins says
The information of this page seems a bit self-contradictory when we consider the fact that the original autographs of the Bible have not been discovered and that no 2 manuscripts of the thousands that have been discovered are exactly identical. If God desired us to know exactly what words Christ spoke, He never would have allowed the original autographs to be lost. Further, He probably would have used 1 gospel writer instead of 4. What we have in Scripture is an accurate portrayal of what God revealed to His prophets as they were lead by the Spirit. Inspiration works upon the human agent and not upon their words.
Greg Logan says
Jeremy,
Admittedly, I don’t see this going anywhere – sort of rambling actually.
I do see a desparation to hold onto what really is just a paper idol…
How about letting go entirely? How about letting God be God? If He needs you to learn/know something – what do you think – is He able to supply you that??
OK, that takes a lot of trust – and that is genuinely scary…
Back to the paper idol – so much more accessible – and then we get to play game-boy wars – how fun is that?!?
And, lastly – damn, dude, but you have a lot of money grubbing going on – I am not sure who is better at it – you or Kenneth Copeland et al.
It is my fond hope never to make a penny off the name of Jesus Christ… so far so good!
Amen