Tagged: Romans
How do I know the Bible is true? (Part 4)
This is the fourth in an eight-part series addressing skeptics’ claims against the Bible. Click on the “Bible” link under Topics to read parts 1-3.
Objection 4: It’s silly to assume that one book – the Bible – contains all of God’s truth and that other great writings, from the Vedas to the Book of Mormon, do not come from God.
In addressing this objection, we must begin with the claims of the documents themselves. The Bible specifically and repeatedly declares itself the written Word of God, while the Vedas do not. Even the Book of Mormon is called “another testament of Jesus Christ.” While many religious writings contain good moral and ethical truths, some of which are consistent with scripture, only the Bible claims to be God’s written and complete revelation to mankind. It answers life’s most important questions: Is there a God? Who is He? How did everything get here? What ‘s my purpose in life? Why is there so much evil in the world? What’s being done about it? Is there life after death? What’s my responsibility to God? And so on. The Bible’s claim to be the Word of God is backed up by unparalleled textual, archaeological, historical and other types of evidence. Most compelling, however, is the testimony of the Holy Spirit, who authored the scriptures and who confirms in our human spirits the truth of God’s Word.
One other note: God’s revelation also has been given to us in creation and in the person of Jesus Christ. All people can observe creation, as the Psalmist did, and conclude that there is a divine designer behind all things (Ps. 8:3-4). And, as Paul wrote, God will hold us responsible for the revelation His has given us of Himself in nature (Rom. 1:18-23). At the same time, God became flesh in Jesus Christ and declared His truth (see John 1:1-3, 14). The testimonies of creation, of Jesus, and of the Bible are in complete harmony in declaring the truth of God’s revelation to us.
Next — Objection 5: The Bible is full of contradictions.
Copyright 2008 by Rob Phillips
Bread of Heaven: Jesus in the Feast of Unleavened Bread (Part 1)
Unleavened bread is a wonderful picture of Jesus the Messiah. The bread is without leaven, as He is without sin. It also is striped and pierced, as His body was beaten and pierced for our sins (Isa. 53:5; 1 Peter 2:24). In addition, the Feast of Unleavened Bread symbolizes Jesus’ burial. His body was placed in the grave but did not see corruption as He rose on the third day (see Psalm 16:10; Isa. 53:9; Matt. 27:57-60, 28:1-10) and carried our sins away (Psalm 103:12; Heb. 9:26).
Everyone should see Jesus in the Feast of Unleavened Bread because He fulfilled the feast’s Messianic symbols in the bread:
1. Provision (Jesus is the bread of life).
2. Propitiation (Jesus is the sacrifice who bore God’s wrath, and in so doing changed God’s wrath into favor with us).
3. Preservation (Jesus’ body did not suffer decay in the grave).
There are other symbolic markers in this feast:
Jesus referred to Himself as the bread of life (John 6:35) and chose the bread of the Passover to be the symbolic memorial of His broken body (Luke 22:19).
Jesus was born in Bethlehem, which means “house of bread.”
The Lord expects believers to put aside sin in our lives, as leaven is put aside during this feast (1 Cor. 5:7-8; see also Eph. 4:22-24 and Gal. 5:16-24).
The seven days speak of satisfaction or fullness; believers are completely satisfied in Christ.
In summary, Passover and Unleavened Bread together picture the sacrificial, substitutionary death of Jesus – the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world – and the burial of His body, which God the Father raised on the third day before it decayed. The resurrection, as we’ll see in two weeks, is pictured in the Feast of Firstfruits.
Copyright 2008 by Rob Phillips
Is God Real?
Every person will stand before God one day without excuse – that is, without defense – because God has revealed Himself in at least two ways to all people.

It’s inevitable. Sooner or later you’ll find yourself in the awkward presence of a little boy or girl who asks that dreaded question:
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Where do babies come from?
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What do you and mom do when the bedroom door is closed?
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Do fish sleep?
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If Jesus is God’s Son, who is God’s wife?
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If we don’t have a chimney, how will Santa get in?
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Is God real?
It’s good for children to be inquisitive. It opens doors of communication with adults, and with other children, and enables them to learn. As that great prophet Kermit the Frog once said, “Asking questions is a very good way to find out about something.” It’s just that we don’t always know how to answer the questions – or perhaps, when it comes to spiritual matters, we have the same unresolved questions in our own minds.
The existence of God is one such question. And like children, we should not be afraid to ask: Is God real? What proof is there? Does God know me? Can I know Him? What kind of God is He? And what difference does it make if He’s real or not?
Many arguments for God’s existence
The evidence for God’s existence may be divided into three categories, according to Dr. Rick Cornish in 5 Minute Apologist:
- Scripture. “God’s existence is revealed from the Bible’s first verse, ‘In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth’ (Genesis 1:1). His existence and active presence saturate the remaining sixty-six books. Since the Christian accepts the Bible as true, sufficient evidence is found in its pages.”
- Nature. “Romans 1:20 tells us that God’s invisible qualities are seen in God’s creation. Psalm 19:1 states, ‘The heavens declare the glory of God.’ The intricate, complex, purposeful design of human beings, more than any other created thing, reveals an intelligent designer. Created in God’s image, all humans sense God’s reality. Romans 2:14-15 indicates that the inner sense of God is known even among people without God’s written revelation in Scripture.”
- The logical arguments of philosophy. “God’s existence is the only reasonable answer to several big questions. Question 1: How did the universe originate? Everything that begins has a cause. The laws of physics reveal that the universe had a beginning, thus it must have had an initial, uncaused cause. That first cause is God” (p. 115). Other questions include: How can the universe be complex and yet ordered? And why do all cultures hold to objective moral values?
Paul’s defense
According to Romans 1:18-20, every person will stand before God one day without excuse – that is, without an apologia or defense – because God has revealed Himself to all people in at least two ways:
- He has revealed Himself in our conscience.
- He has revealed Himself in creation.
1. God has revealed Himself in our conscience.
Verse 19 reads: “… since what can be known about God is evident among them, because God has shown it to them.” The “them” refers to unbelievers – Gentile unbelievers in this case – who “by their unrighteousness suppress the truth.” The word “suppress” means to hold down, or to repress. They do not allow the truth to work in their lives. Rather, they suppress the truth so they might live their lives the way they want to live them. Later, Paul says they turn the truth into a lie, and become like brute beasts in their thinking, so that God gives them up to their way of living. This results in “godlessness” and “unrighteousness,” and it draws the “wrath” of God. Richard Chenevix Trench, a 19th century biblical scholar, defines it as “a wrath of God who would not love good unless He hated evil, the two being inseparable, that He must do both or neither.” Marvin R. Vincent, author of Vincent’s Word Studies in the New Testament, describes it as God’s personal emotion with regard to sin. “God does not reap wrath where he has not sown knowledge,” says Willmington’s Bible Handbook.
“What can be known about God is evident among them,” writes Paul. Why? “Because God has shown it to them.” A guilty conscience knows the truth – knows what is right – and a decision is forced upon it. Either the person will acknowledge the truth and repent (change his or her attitude or actions, and make right what was wrong) or the person will suppress the truth until the conscience, as Paul wrote in 1 Tim. 4:2, is “seared with a hot iron.” God has placed within every human heart a conscience – a knowledge of right and wrong. Some people – even some cultures – choose to suppress that knowledge, but that doesn’t make it any less true. The fact that people around the world – regardless of technological advancement or religious practice – know that stealing, murder, rape and other such actions are wrong is a testimony to the truth that there is a sovereign God who created us and to whom we must give an account.
2. God has revealed Himself in creation.
Verse 20 reads: “From the creation of the world His invisible attributes, that is, His eternal power and divine nature, have been clearly seen, being understood through what He has made. As a result, people are without excuse.” Not only did God give us a conscience, He gave us the testimony of Himself in the things He made. Warren Wiersbe writes: “Human history began with man knowing God. Human history is not the story of a beast that worshiped idols, and then evolved into a man worshiping one God. Human history is just the opposite: man began knowing God, but turned from the truth and rejected God. God revealed Himself to man through creation, the things that He made. From the world around him, man knew that there was a God who had the wisdom to plan and the power to create.”
Psalm 19:1 says, “The heavens declare the glory of God, and the firmament showeth His handiwork.” The things that are invisible of God, namely, His eternal power and Godhead, are clearly seen. “What a paradox,” writes Greek scholar Kenneth Wuest, “invisible things which are visible…. Man, reasoning upon the basis of the law of cause and effect, which law requires an adequate cause for every effect, is forced to the conclusion that such a tremendous effect as the universe, demands a Being of eternal power and divine attributes. That Being must be the Deity who should be worshipped.” Wuest continues, “Thus, through the light of the created universe, unsaved man recognizes the fact that there is a supreme Being who created it, who has eternal power and divine attributes, a Being to whom worship and obedience are due.”
It’s important to note that Paul is not saying the full gospel message of Christ’s death, burial and resurrection is clear to all people from the testimony of creation, for that requires God’s further revelation of His Son through the preaching of the Word and the convicting power of the Holy Spirit. But Paul is saying that all people are rendered without defense for rejecting God because God has shown all people He exists and is to be the sole object of their worship.
Conclusion
So how do we answer the little boy or girl – or the inquisitive adult for that matter – who asks, “Is God real?” Perhaps the simplest and best way to respond is to say, “I believe God is real. When I look at the universe – so big, beautiful and complex – I am driven to the conclusion that someone started it all. And when I think that people everywhere somehow know in their hearts what’s right and what’s wrong, I feel certain someone put that conscience there. Because of these things – creation and conscience – I believe God is real.”
While this simple answer may satisfy a child, and perhaps even some adults, it likely will do little to persuade skeptics. For them, more questions – tougher questions – are in order, as are our best efforts to answer them. Still, if God’s Word is true, the sovereign Creator of the universe gets to chance to question us in the end. And as the apostle Paul wrote, no one will have an excuse – an apologia, or defense – for saying, “I didn’t know there was a God.”
Rob Phillips 2008
