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KJVO Seminars
King James Version Only
Seventh Day Adventists
Believe
Selected Messages, Vol. I
Pages 15 - 18
The Inspiration of the Word of God
This is a time
when the question with all propriety may be asked ,
"When the Son of man cometh,
shall he find faith on the earth?"
(Luke 18:8).
Spiritual darkness has covered the earth and
gross darkness the people. There are in many churches skepticism and
infidelity in the interpretation of the Scriptures. Many, very
many, are questioning the verity and truth of the Scriptures. Human
reasoning and the imaginings of the human heart are undermining the
inspiration of the Word of God, and that which should be received as
granted, is surrounded with a cloud of mysticism. Nothing stands out in
clear and distinct lines, upon rock bottom. This is one of the marked
signs of the last days
This Holy Book has withstood the assaults of
Satan, who has united with evil men to make everything of divine
character shrouded in clouds and darkness.
But the Lord has preserved this Holy Book
by His own miraculous power in its present shape-
-a chart or guidebook to the human family to show
them the way to heaven
But the oracles of God have been so manifestly
neglected that there are but few in our world, even of those knowledge
of the Scriptures. There are learned men who have a college education,
but these shepherds do not feed the flock of God. They do not consider
that the excellencies of the Scriptures will be continually unfolding
their hidden treasures as precious jewels are discovered by digging for
them.
There are men who strive to be original, who
are wise above what is written; therefore, their wisdom is foolishness.
They discover wonderful things in advance, ideas which reveal that they
are far behind in the comprehension of the divine will and purposes of
God. In seeking to make plain or to unravel mysteries hid from ages from
mortal man, they are like a man floundering about in the mud, unable
to extricate himself and yet telling others how to get out of the
muddy sea they themselves are in. This is a fit representation of
the men who set themselves to correct the errors of the Bible.
No man can improve the Bible
by suggesting what the Lord meant to say or ought to have said.
Some look to us gravely and say, "Don't you
think there might have been some mistake in the copyist or in the
translators?" This is all probable, and the mind that is so narrow
that it will hesitate and stumble over this possibility or probability
would be just as ready to stumble over the mysteries of the Inspired
Word, because their feeble minds cannot see through the purposes of God.
Yes, they would just as easily stumble over plain facts that the
common mind will accept, and discern the Divine, and to which God's
utterance is plain and beautiful, full of marrow and fatness.
All the mistakes will not cause trouble to one soul, or cause any feet
to stumble, that would not manufacture difficulties from the plainest
revealed truth
God committed the preparation of His divinely
inspired Word to finite man. This Word, arranged into books, the Old and
New Testaments, is the guidebook to the inhabitants of a fallen world,
bequeathed to them that,
by studying and obeying the directions,
not one soul
would lose its way to heaven.
Those who think to make the supposed difficulties of
Scripture plain, in measuring by their finite rule that which is
inspired and that which is not inspired, had better cover their faces,
as Elijah when the still small voice spoke to him; for they are in the
presence of God and holy angels, who for ages have communicated to men
light and knowledge, telling them what to do and what not to do,
unfolding before them scenes of thrilling interest, waymark by waymark
in symbols and signs and illustrations.
And He [God] has not, while presenting the
perils clustering about the last days, qualified any finite man to
unravel hidden mysteries or inspired one man or any class of men to
pronounce judgment as to that which is inspired or is not. When men,
in their finite judgment, find it necessary to go into an examination of
scriptures to define that which is inspired and that which is not, they
have stepped before Jesus to show Him a better way than He has led us.
I take the Bible just as it is,
as the Inspired Word.
I believe its utterances in an entire Bible .
Men arise who think they find something to criticize
in God's Word. They lay it bare before others as evidence of superior
wisdom. These men are, many of them, smart men, learned men, they have
eloquence and talent, the whole lifework [of whom] is to unsettle minds
in regard to the inspiration of the Scriptures. They influence many to
see as they do. And the same work is passed on from one to another, just
as Satan designed it should be, until we may see the full meaning of the
words of Christ, "When the Son of man cometh, shall he find faith on the
earth?" (Luke 18:8).
Brethren, let not a mind or hand be engaged in
criticizing the Bible. It is a work that Satan delights to have any of
you do,
but it is not a work the Lord has pointed out for you to do.
Men should let God take care of His own Book,
His living oracles, as He has done for ages. They begin to question
some parts of revelation, and pick flaws in the apparent inconsistencies
of this statement and that statement.
Beginning at Genesis, they give up that which they
deem questionable, and their minds lead on, for Satan will lead to any
length they may follow in their criticism, and they see something to
doubt in the whole Scriptures. Their faculties of criticism become
sharpened by exercise, and they can rest on nothing with a certainty.
You try to reason with these men, but your time is lost. They
will exercise their power of ridicule even upon the Bible. They even
become mockers, and they would be astonished if you put it to them in
that light.
Brethren,
cling to your Bible, as it reads,
and stop your criticisms in regard to its validity,
and obey the Word,
and not one of you will be lost .
The ingenuity of men has been exercised for ages to
measure the Word of God by their finite minds and limited comprehension.
If the Lord, the Author of the living oracles, would throw back the
curtain and reveal His wisdom and His glory before them, they would
shrink into nothingness and exclaim as did Isaiah, "I am a man of
unclean lips, and I dwell in the midst of people of unclean lips" (Isa.
6:5).
Simplicity and plain utterance are comprehended by the
illiterate, by the peasant, and the child as well as by the full-grown
man or the giant in intellect. If the individual is possessed of
large talents of mental powers, he will find in the oracles of God
treasures of truth, beautiful and valuable, which he can appropriate. He
will also find difficulties, and secrets and wonders which will give him
the highest satisfaction to study during a long lifetime, and yet there
is an infinity beyond.
Men of humble acquirements, possessing but limited
capabilities and opportunities to become conversant in the Scriptures,
find in the living oracles comfort, guidance, counsel, and the plan of
salvation as clear as a sunbeam. No one need be lost for want of
knowledge, unless he is willfully blind
We thank God that the Bible is prepared for the poor man as
well as for the learned man. It is fitted for all ages and all classes.--Manuscript
16, 1888 (written at Minneapolis, Minn., in autumn of 1888).
(Emphasis supplied)
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