Gary DeMar and Kim Burgess dropped the first of their podcasts on 1 Corinthians 15 today. If either of them turned this in at Whitefield Theological Seminary, it’d get an F. It’s that bad. I immediately got to typing and here is my quick reaction:
– The Same Old Word-Game on Mellō
Gary (and Kim) is still stuck insisting that mellō always means “about to,” even though he’s never proven it and has flat-out ignored my challenge to him on Acts 26:22.
They do the same thing with the word parousia. Now, a person may agree that every use of parousia refers to the same event, but it’s one thing to demonstrate that exegetically, and quite another to assume it because you’ve bought into this strange notion that words in Scripture can only ever mean one thing.
That’s not scholarship; that’s laziness.
– Twisting the Creeds: The False Claim About the Nicene “Correction”
It gets worse. They actually claim that the Nicene Creed corrected the Apostles’ Creed by changing “resurrection of the body” to the supposedly more “biblical” phrase, “resurrection of the dead.” As if the body isn’t even in view in 1 Corinthians 15! From verse 35 through verse 44, Paul uses the Greek word sōma (“body”) ten times. Yet Kim goes so far as to say that “resurrection of the flesh” is a “contradiction in terms.”
How? Of course, Kim never explains how. The only way he could possibly arrive at that conclusion is if he treats flesh (sarx) the same way they treat mellō; as if it only has one meaning everywhere it appears. But “flesh” in Scripture clearly has a range of meanings.
– Christ’s Resurrection Was of the Flesh
And what then are we to do with Christ’s resurrection, which these men claim to affirm? Christ’s resurrection was bodily. It was of the flesh. His fleshly body died and rose again.
“As they were talking about these things, Jesus himself stood among them, and said to them, ‘Peace to you!’ But they were startled and frightened and thought they saw a spirit. And he said to them, ‘Why are you troubled, and why do doubts arise in your hearts? See my hands and my feet, that it is I myself. Touch me, and see. For a spirit does not have flesh and bones as you see that I have.'” (Luke 24:36–39)
“For a spirit (pneuma) does not have flesh (sarx) and bones (osteon) as you see I have.”
Obviously, then, “resurrection of the flesh” is not a “contradiction in terms.”
– The Historical Record: No Evidence of a Bodiless Creed
There’s absolutely no evidence that the Nicene Creed was “correcting” the Apostles’ Creed to avoid the idea of flesh being involved in the resurrection. And if that were their intent, it would actually be a denial of the Apostles’ Creed itself; a point that completely flies over DeMar’s head. You can’t redefine a doctrine and then claim to affirm it.
The hyper-preterist claim that the 381 Creed was a “corrective” to deny bodily resurrection has no support in the sources whatsoever.
On every front—creed manuscripts, council records, and patristic theology—the early Church consistently taught that bodies will rise again. The phrase “resurrection of the dead” in the Nicene Creed was always understood in full continuity with “resurrection of the body” or “resurrection of the flesh,” not as a covert denial of a physical resurrection.
The Fathers used dead and body/flesh interchangeably in reference to the same hope. The idea that Nicaea (or Constantinople) quietly erased bodily resurrection is historical revisionism of the worst kind.
– The “Burros of Berea” Problem
And all of this follows a rather dishonest admission from Gary at the start of the episode. He claims he was dragged into this controversy because of comments he made years ago on the Burros of Berea podcast.
According to him, he was merely describing that some people believe you receive your resurrection body at death, and he supposedly just said he “had no problem” with that view. He insists he wasn’t rejecting the traditional view; just acknowledging another perspective.
But the dishonesty lies in the fact that Gary was specifically asked what he personally believes:
“When your body takes its last breath, what is your belief?”
He answered, and I quote:
“I believe that when you die, you go to be with the Lord, and you get a new body at that time.”
So no, Gary wasn’t simply pointing out what others believe. He explicitly said that he believes that very thing. He denied the resurrection of the body in that podcast—plain and simple—and now he’s trying to rewrite history as if he didn’t.
– “It Doesn’t Affect Worldview”? Think Again
What makes this even more absurd is his claim in this latest episode that he didn’t have a problem with that belief because, in his words,
“…to me, it’s not a factor in terms of worldview thinking. What happens when we die doesn’t come into play in terms of how we’re living out the Christian faith in the world in which we live today.”
Oh, really? Ever read 1 and 2 Peter, Gary? Or Romans 8? Or Philippians 3?
I would argue, and have argued in our sermon series, that the hope of bodily resurrection is precisely the foundation for how we live as Christians in the world today. It’s not some detached doctrinal curiosity; it’s the heartbeat of Christian ethics and endurance.
Peter grounds the entire moral and pastoral force of his letters in the certainty of the coming judgment and the future resurrection. The call to holiness, perseverance, and hope flows directly out of that eschatological reality.
“He has caused us to be born again to a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead, to an inheritance that is imperishable, undefiled, and unfading, kept in heaven for you, who by God’s power are being guarded through faith for a salvation ready to be revealed in the last time.” (1 Peter 1:3–5)
In 1 Peter 1:13-16, the imperative “set your hope fully” is explicitly future-oriented. Holiness in the present is the ethical outworking of fixing one’s hope on the eschatological revelation of Christ. Peter’s “therefore” shows that eschatology drives ethics.
“Therefore, preparing your minds for action, and being sober-minded, set your hope fully on the grace that will be brought to you at the revelation of Jesus Christ.”
In 1 Peter 1:17-21, Peter ties obedience in this life to the coming judgment. The believer’s conduct is shaped by the knowledge that the Father will judge impartially; a future eschatological reckoning.
“If you call on him as Father who judges impartially according to each one’s deeds, conduct yourselves with fear throughout the time of your exile…”
In 1 Peter 2:11-12, the “day of visitation” is a future day of divine judgment or vindication. Present moral purity and good works serve evangelistic and eschatological purposes.
“Beloved, I urge you as sojourners and exiles to abstain from the passions of the flesh, which wage war against your soul. Keep your conduct among the Gentiles honorable, so that when they speak against you as evildoers, they may see your good deeds and glorify God on the day of visitation.”
In 1 Peter 4:7-10, Peter explicitly links ethical behavior—sobriety, prayer, and love—to eschatological imminence. The nearness of “the end” demands alert, holy living. And no, we’re not ignoring the so-called “time texts,” such as verse 7. Kim and Gary keep slanderously accusing us of that, but it’s simply false.
“The end of all things is at hand; therefore be self-controlled and sober-minded for the sake of your prayers. Above all, keep loving one another earnestly, since love covers a multitude of sins. Show hospitality to one another without grumbling. As each has received a gift, use it to serve one another, as good stewards of God’s varied grace:”
In 1 Peter 4:12-13, present suffering is interpreted through the lens of future glory. The eschatological revelation of Christ’s glory gives meaning and endurance to persecution.
“Beloved, do not be surprised at the fiery trial when it comes upon you to test you, as though something strange were happening to you. But rejoice insofar as you share Christ’s sufferings, that you may also rejoice and be glad when his glory is revealed.”
In 1 Peter 5:1-4, pastoral faithfulness and humility are sustained by the expectation of Christ’s future appearing and reward. Again, eschatology shapes vocation and character.
“When the chief Shepherd appears, you will receive the unfading crown of glory.”
In 2 Peter 1:10-11, ethical diligence leads to eschatological assurance. Present godliness confirms the believer’s readiness for entry into Christ’s eternal kingdom.
“Be all the more diligent to confirm your calling and election, for if you practice these qualities you will never fall. For in this way there will be richly provided for you an entrance into the eternal kingdom of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.”
Furthermore, Peter makes it unmistakably clear that false doctrine and moral corruption go hand in hand. The heretics he describes in 2 Peter 2–3 are not merely confused interpreters; they are willful deceivers whose denial of the Lord’s return is directly linked to their immoral lifestyle.
In 2 Peter 2, their character and conduct are on full display: they are “bold and willful” (2:10), “slaves of corruption” (2:19), and “blots and blemishes” (2:13). Their theology accommodates their lusts. They deny “the Master who bought them” (2:1) and twist the promise of His coming into an excuse for sin. Their doctrinal deviation is moral at its root. They scoff at judgment because they love their own depravity.
Peter ties the progression together in 2 Peter 3:3–4:
“Scoffers will come in the last days with scoffing, following their own sinful desires. They will say, “Where is the promise of his coming? For ever since the fathers fell asleep, all things are continuing as they were from the beginning of creation.””
They dismiss the Second Coming because it threatens their autonomy. The denial of eschatological judgment becomes the license for unrestrained living.
Peter answers their cynicism by reminding believers of two things: the certainty of divine judgment (3:7) and the patience of God in salvation (3:9). The same God who once judged the world by water will again judge by fire. Far from being delayed, the Lord’s timing is merciful, giving room for repentance before the final reckoning.
In other words, to scoff at the Second Coming is to scoff at holiness itself. When false teachers erase the future return of Christ, they remove the moral horizon that keeps the church sober, humble, and watchful.
And Peter could not be any clearer than 2 Peter 3:10-14:
“But the day of the Lord will come like a thief, and then the heavens will pass away with a roar, and the heavenly bodies will be burned up and dissolved, and the earth and the works that are done on it will be exposed. Since all these things are thus to be dissolved, what sort of people ought you to be in lives of holiness and godliness, waiting for and hastening the coming of the day of God, because of which the heavens will be set on fire and dissolved, and the heavenly bodies will melt as they burn! But according to his promise we are waiting for new heavens and a new earth in which righteousness dwells. Therefore, beloved, since you are waiting for these, be diligent to be found by him without spot or blemish, and at peace.”
Having exposed the false teachers’ denial of judgment, Peter brings his letter to a climactic close by grounding true Christian living in the certainty of that judgment and the promise of renewal. The destruction of the old and the creation of the new are not speculative curiosities — they are moral imperatives.
Eschatology is not an appendix to doctrine; it is the heartbeat of Christian ethics. The same certainty that “all these things will be dissolved” also guarantees that there will be “new heavens and a new earth in which righteousness dwells.” Those twin truths — dissolution and renewal — demand lives marked by holiness, godliness, diligence, and peace.
Future righteousness defines present conduct. The believer’s anticipation of the coming age shapes his moral integrity in this one. We live as citizens of the world to come, waiting for what God has promised, and our purity now is the visible evidence that our hope is genuine.
That is why Peter closes his letter with this sober exhortation:
“You therefore, beloved, knowing this beforehand, take care that you are not carried away with the error of lawless people and lose your own stability. But grow in the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.” (2 Peter 3:17–18)
Sound doctrine and sound living rise and fall together. A distorted eschatology always leads to ethical collapse, just as we see today among those who, like Gary and Kim, scoff at the promise of Christ’s appearing while claiming to defend biblical consistency.
To argue, as Gary does, that the resurrection and the new heavens and new earth have no bearing on our present lives is not merely misguided, it is spiritually disastrous. Peter would have called such reasoning blindness. The entire moral framework of Christian faithfulness rests on the certainty of future resurrection and renewal.
“If the dead are not raised, “Let us eat and drink, for tomorrow we die.” Do not be deceived: “Bad company ruins good morals.” Wake up from your drunken stupor, as is right, and do not go on sinning. For some have no knowledge of God. I say this to your shame.” (1 Corinthians 15:32-34)
The apostles never treat the promise of the new creation as a minor point for debate. For them, it is the engine that drives Christian perseverance and purpose. The coming reality of resurrection gives meaning to obedience, courage to suffering, and direction to hope. Because this world will be dissolved and remade, believers live now as heirs of that world, walking in holiness and hope.
To detach Christian ethics from eschatology is to strip Christianity of its horizon. Without the expectation of bodily resurrection, holiness becomes optional, suffering loses its context, and hope collapses into sentimentality.
Peter’s eschatology does not pull believers away from faithful living; it propels them into it. It sanctifies our present engagement in the world by fixing our eyes on the one to come. The creation itself will be freed from corruption; righteousness will dwell upon a renewed earth; and our resurrected bodies will share in that glory. The future is not irrelevant to the present. It defines it.
To deny that connection, as Gary does, is to preach a Christianity without resurrection power and a faith without forward motion.
And this is precisely what Peter warns against. The false teachers of his day scoffed at the coming judgment and therefore abandoned holiness. Their denial of Christ’s return was not an innocent exegetical error; it was a moral rebellion disguised as theology. Once the expectation of resurrection and renewal is stripped away, the call to righteousness loses its urgency, and corruption rushes in to fill the vacuum.
That same pattern repeats itself today. Those who mock the future hope of Christ’s appearing — while boasting of their “consistency” — reveal that their theology serves their desires, not the text. And Peter would have recognized them instantly.
Well, I’m excited to be speaking with you this evening. You might have picked up from my funny accent that I’m not from around here. And that’s cuz I’m from Ipsswitch. But I, as Dan said, am excited to talk about my favorite topic, and that is the Bible. Because like you heard in that trailer for our series at Apologetics Canada, can I trust the Bible?
I as a Christian claim to stake my life on this historical individual Jesus of Nazareth. And where I find the source of information from that individual’s life is not just the Bible, but in the four-fold gospels that we find, Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John. These biographical accounts of his life found within scripture. And so we’re going to go through some details, some facts tonight that I hope will give you a foundation for you to walk away and likewise understand the vast reservoir that is the trustworthiness that we can put within the Bible. And when we talk about the Bible, we could be talking about all sorts of things philosophically, historically, contextually about the Bible and what it is. But what I want to capitalize on tonight is the simple fact that we often look at and understand the Bible as this, right? And that’s obviously what it is, right? It’s a single bound volume that we have today. But the Bible didn’t always look like this.
The Bible throughout history looked a little bit different in that the Bible isn’t one book as much as it’s 66 books written over a period of 1600 years on three different continents by close to 40 different authors in three different languages. two major languages, Greek and Hebrew, and one minor language, Aramaic. And our culture, because we’ve moved far beyond in Western society, in Australia, in Canada, from our Judeo-Christian roots, the misunderstandings that are often communicated about the Bible are one simply because people don’t know what we’re talking about when we talk about the Bible. and we encounter objections that are common but are simple misunderstandings and misrepresentations. Characterizations like this.
One of my favorite things about the Bible is how antiquated all the things that are supposed to take place in the future are already. How all the prophecies, how completely antiquated they are. Because you know when the when the Bible was uh written and then rewritten and then edited and then re-edited and then translated from dead languages and then re- re-ransated and then re-edited and then re-reeddited and then re-ransated and then uh given to Kings for them to take their favorite parts out and then re-edited and re-ransated and then re-edited and then given to the Pope for him to approve and then re-ransated. Then re-rewritten then rewritten, re-edited, re-ransated, re-edited again. all based on stories that were told orally 30 to 90 years after they happened to people who didn’t know how to write.
[Applause]
So I guess what I’m saying is the Bible is literally the world’s oldest game of telephone.
Now that’s David Cross. You might recognize him. He’s a famous actor and comedian. And this characterization of what the Bible is being this long telephone game, this this line of transmission of people communicating and it being edited and redacted and so on is one that I hear all the time. Maybe you’ve heard it too. And when you dig into what people are actually communicating when they use this illustration, they think something like this. that there may very well have been an individual within history called Jesus and Jesus communicated words maybe in the language that would have been spoken in first century Judea Aramaic and at that point that’s more or less correct and then they think okay well his followers or somebody around the time frame maybe a little bit farther than we would actually say they wrote but wrote those things down in Greek and time goes on and people aren’t speaking Greek anymore. They’re speaking languages like Latin. So they take those Greek copies, they translate them into Latin and they get rid of the Greek copies because nobody can read or nobody’s speaking those anyways. And time goes on further and you have middle a middle ages and languages like uh middle-aged Latin being turned into German. And so German is the language that it’s translated into. And the Latin copies are once again gotten rid of. And this goes on and on for a number of languages until eventually you get to the English. And so you have a translation of a translation of a translation in this long line of transmission. Now if you dig into how we actually do get something like a modern English Bible, that is the opposite of what we see. Not only do we not see translations of translations of translations, but when you hold a modern English Bible in your hands today, it is a direct translation from the original Hebrew and Greek. And translation committees, individuals who have dedicated their lives to understanding the language and history and context of the Bible, consult previous editions and translations to understand how people have understood this text throughout history. But that’s not what they’re translating. But they do check it to see how people in the past have understood these things. This is a very important difference that individuals like David Cross and others misunderstand in the difference between translation going from one language into another and transmission going from an ancient text in papyrus or parchment into modern-day print. And likewise, what David Cross articulated with the telephone game or what has previously been called Chinese whispers, which is not appropriate, right? So, we’re not going to use that word. Um, politically incorrect and I’m Canadian and I have to be politically correct. So, what we’re talking about with something like the telephone game, if you know the game is a single line of transmission. Someone whispers into the person beside them’s ear and they whisper into the next and the next and the next and there are rules. You can’t say it more than once. You have to whisper. The game is designed to corrupt the the understanding of the message. But that is not what we see with the Bible. When we look at the history of the Bible, we don’t see a single line of transmission. We see multiple lines of transmission of individuals writing at different times in different places by different authors in different locations to different audiences. And then we have scribes who are likewise writing in different times in different places who are writing as different authors as scribes as copists to individuals in different locations. And so there are copies that it’s vitally important to understand in terms of this idea of a transmission of going from ancient papyrus to modern day print that this is not a process of a single line of transmission but multiple lines of transmission. The New Testament originated at different times in multiple places written by multiple authors with books being sent to multiple locations. And between the first century when we have say the New Testament documents being written, between that and the fourth century when you have the decriminalization of Christianity under someone like the emperor Constantine, those centuries encompass hundreds, if not thousands of copies of the Bible spread over all of the ancient world. And this number only grows as Christianity is moved from an illegal religion to a decriminalized religion where people are able to copy and pass around the text all over the ancient world. And this resulted in two things. First, it resulted in the gospel being spread very quickly all over the place. And second, what it meant is that no one person or no one group could have controlled the text at any one point in time. So when David Cross talks about kings and popes and scribes, if a king like once again the emperor Constantine in the 4th century wanted to do something like is asserted in the Da Vinci Code, like insert the divinity of Christ, he has to go back into the sands of Egypt, dig up copies that were buried hundreds of years before he was born, change them, and then put them back in the sand for us to find in the 21st century. That’s not realistic. That’s not how this works. And so the gospel is spread very quickly, very early on. And we have these messages all over the place in the actual artifacts of the physical documents. The thing that I’m passionate about and study in the manuscripts, the handwritten copies that are all over the ancient world. This is a fascinating topic and concept that gives us confidence in the credibility of the Christian scriptures.
When we look back at how we actually go from ancient papyrus to modern-day print, the history of the Bible is not some sort of layered web of translations. In reality, what we find ourselves with is a single step going from the original Hebrew and Greek directly into our Bibles today. The translation of the Bible takes into consideration an amazing collection of archaeological evidence from discoveries in Israel like the Dead Sea Scrolls to papyrie dug up in places like Oxarinkus. Over time, as we’ve uncovered more of these fragments and manuscripts, they haven’t complicated our understanding of the Bible, but clarified it. The documents that sit behind the history of the Bible and the way that we translate them today gives us confidence in their reliability to go from the original languages into our own. Even though we’re almost 2,000 years removed from the last book of the Bible that was written, as discoveries are made, we are not getting farther away from the text, but getting closer. This evidence confirms and gives us good reason to trust that our Bibles have been faithfully and accurately copied and that what we have now is what the original authors wrote.
And let me capitalize on a phrase that you just heard me say that as time goes on, we’re not getting farther away from the text, but we’re getting closer by illustrating this from capitalizing and using example from the King James Bible. The King James Bible, a very famous English translation, was translated between604 and 1611. And particularly the New Testament of the King James wasn’t translated from manuscripts, but printed editions of the Greek New Testament. Seven printed editions of the Greek New Testament. The key ones within those seven printed editions was based on 31 manuscripts available at that time. Now, for what it was, it was an excellent translation and remains incredibly reliable for the day that we live in as well. But if we skip over to 2025, we not only have and are aware of what the 31 manuscripts that were used for the base text, the underlying Greek of the translation process of the King James Bible, which was published in 1611. But we have 5,000 plus other manuscripts that likewise share and and clear up our understanding of the text that go back further within the time frame of history. So that when we stick shovels in the ground, we are able to see how the text has both changed and has been preserved over time. As we find these manuscripts, what it does is not alter and radically change how he understood the Bible in 1611, but works to confirm it. So it allows us to then likewise publish modern English translations and the same key ideas, concepts, and ultimately the text is there and has been preserved. As time goes on, even though the 1611 translators were closer, a few hundred years to the original text, because of the evidence that God has revealed, has given to us in this time frame of things like extreme skepticism, we’ve been able to see, no, God’s word has been preserved and it’s been preserved because of the evidence, not in spite of it. Evidence like the manuscript that’s on your screen right now. This is P66 or P bottom 2 and it is a manuscript of the Gospel of John from the late 2nd or early 3rd century. Now scholars are very imaginative and they name things based on a whole bunch of different factors. So this is made out of the material papyrus. So they take the first letter of that word tracking with me so far? It’s a P. And they say okay how many of these do we have so far? 65. Haha. P66. And this makes us scholars feel very intellectual and superior. And so we look at something like B66 which is incredibly important. And it’s incredibly important for a number of reasons, but chiefly because it is a codeex or a book. Once again, codeex means book in Latin. And so us intellectuals like just use the Latin words to make ourselves sound smart. And so books are very vulnerable at the beginning and at the end because those are the areas that are open to being worn down to the elements to bugs to being ripped and so on and so forth. So we tend to have a lots lots of middles of books from periods where codeexes were very popular and what P66 preserves for us is the beginning of the gospel of John. John chapter 1. Let’s all read together along on the screen. It says no takers. You sir, I’ll make it easy for you. Go ahead. Loud and clear.
Okay then.
In the beginning was the word and the word was with God and the word was God. He was in the beginning with God. All things were made through him and not and without him was not anything made that was made. Sound familiar? You know why?
Because what Christians were reading in the late, second, early third century in terms of the beginning of the Gospel of John that some Christian scribe wrote down is exactly what we read in our modern English translations. Now, this isn’t true for all manuscripts. I’m not saying that there aren’t additions and deletions, but ironically, it’s actually the additions and deletions that help us understand why even those lend to the credibility. Because these additions, deletions tend to be geographically located. like I said before spread very far. So when changes pop up in one area almost exclusively by accident, not on purpose, then we can say, okay, well there are changes in the Syrian copies, but there aren’t changes in our copies from North Africa or Europe or Asia. And so, ironically, both the manuscripts like P66 that reveal the preservation of the text and the ones that have a lot of differences within them both lend to our understanding because we can compare and contrast and gives us a level of credibility and confidence to say we know what the original text was. And so, unlike the telephone game, I want to give you a better illustration of what we’re dealing with with the Bible. Unlike the telephone game, which is a single line of transmission, I think that the text of the Bible is far more like a puzzle. A puzzle with a 100,000 pieces. Now, if I were to hand you a puzzle with 100,000 pieces, and you opened it up, would it be more annoying or less annoying if it had 99,900 pieces, meaning it was missing 100, or 100,00 pieces, meaning that it had 100 too many? Well, that’s both annoying, and you would have reasonable grounds to be mad at this Canadian. Nonetheless, and I would say I’m very sorry about it. And but really, you want more pieces because when you put the puzzle together, you can see where there are just pieces that shouldn’t be there. There are pieces that are added from a different puzzle. There are pieces that don’t fit. There are blank pieces. There are pieces where your sibling has come in and they’ve smashed it in the wrong place. Once you put the puzzle together and the picture comes into view, you realize what does fit and what doesn’t. And so in that sense, we don’t have a 100% of the text of the Bible. We have 110%. And it’s because of our the vast repository of manuscripts that we have that we’re able to say it’s not that hard to figure out what the 10% is. It takes some leg work. And individuals like myself who uh find it interesting to dig through the original languages can allow us to understand why we know what the Bible says. Why? When I read my English translation, I have confidence that that is what the original authors wrote even if the most recent book of this book was written 2,000 years ago. I hope that gives you confidence. Now, in one sense, your Bible and particularly your English Bible has been changed. And let me illustrate that for you by showing you what the text of the English Bible looked like um over time in Psalm 23 from the 9th century over to the 21st century. When was the last time you were in church or at a funeral or at a wedding and you someone said, “We’re going to read Psalm 23.” Okay, let’s open it up. Drayton Meteth Main’s goods one and he may get on good Fant and Fed me by water. Sometimes you read a passage of scripture, it just hits you right here, does it? [Applause] That’s English, but that’s old English. And obviously that doesn’t sound like English. And so in one sense, your Bible has been changed, but not for the sake of corruption, but for the sake of clarity. And that’s a good thing for you to be able to not just understand it, but apply it to your life. Now, let me very quickly as we kind of dig into this, I want to capitalize on the New Testament and particularly the Gospels and give you some key reasons why you can have trust in the biblical text. The first is location, location, location. When we look at the Bible, we see lots of places and names located in particular places.
The biography of Jesus written by this individual Luke, what we call the gospel according to Luke prefaces his gospel with his thesis statement. Why am I writing? I’m writing because many have undertaken to draw up an account of the things that have been fulfilled among us just as they were handed down to us by those who are from first were eyewitnesses and servants of the word. With this in mind, since I myself have carefully investigated everything from the beginning, I too have decided to write an orderly account for you, most excellent Theophilus, so that you may know the certainty of the things that you have been taught. And we likewise see that Luke, who is a very careful historian, uses a word that we often translate as account or sometimes it’s translated in your Bible as narrative to describe his book. and other Greco Roman writers do similar things using the word this word that Luke uses to describe their writings. Two very important writers, Josephus and Lucian. In fact, Lucian’s document is called how to write history. And in it, he says, “You should write an orderly account.” Luke is taking note of this. Luke goes to lengths to demonstrate that his narrative is placed within an actual time and location. In the first three verses of Luke chapter 3, we are not only given seven historical characters that mark out the beginning of the ministry of John the Baptist, but within these three verses alone are 22 historical references to locations and people that have been verified by archaeology and ancient literary sources outside of the Bible. This places Luke’s account within a historical framework, making sure his readers know he’s not merely making up a story, but pinpointing when and where these events actually took place in history. And the gospel authors do this in multiple different ways with names, locations, as well as with accurate plant and animal life related to the areas within the narratives they are describing. The gospel authors get these types of facts right even when other ancient writers of the time don’t. And it’s interesting that not only do they locate these things, but we have four biographies of Jesus. And this is very important because we rarely have multiple sources that describe an individual and give as much bio biographical information as we see with Jesus in the ancient world within the time frame of Jesus within the first century. The only other true comparable character is the emperor at the time, Tiberius Caesar, the one who’s on the coin that Dan so graciously gave me. Tiberius Caesar has similar to Jesus four writers who talk about the biographical information of his life. Valas Peterculus, Tacitus, Sutonius, and Casodio. So, it’s a very interesting test case to look at Jesus and look at an individual who is arguably the most powerful, the most important, the most well-known character of the time and compare it to a Galilean traveling rabbi who really shouldn’t have anything said about himself at this time. And yet, he does. And if we kind of dig down on this and I share a little bit about what I’m passionate about, the manuscripts, these are all examples of our first copies of these documents and their dates. All of these are incomplete copies. So there are earliest surviving fragments of once complete copies of these books, but over time and the centuries, over the last two millennia, they’ve left left to us only partial stages of existence today. But if we look at Matthew, our earliest fragmentaryary copies coming from the second century, uh Mark coming from the second century, um sorry, John coming from the second century, Mark coming from the 3rd century, and Luke coming from the 3rd century. And we compare it to those sources for the emperor. Valas Peterculus is from the first century, Tacus second, Sutonius second, and Casio is actually the ninth. And although Valas Peterculus is writing in the century, he’s a political propagandist. So though he’s the earliest, he’s the least reliable because he has monetary incentive to make the emperor look good. Now if we’re talking about our earliest complete copies, not just fragments, but cover to cover copies with all four gospels, that number is drastically different. That switches to the 4th century for all four gospels where for Tiberius we get the 16th century and then the 9th century for the others. Now what does this mean? What this means is that at face value, we can have just as much good source information as the most powerful, most well-known, and most influential person of the time as we can for Jesus Christ. This is important. This is important when we see accusations about who Jesus is. And there’s this hyper level of skepticism. If you’re going to be skeptical of the historical person of Jesus based on the source material, you basically have to be skeptical about everyone else within the ancient world because we have just as much well articulated source information for Jesus as we do for anyone that we have a firm foundation on what the details of their life were in the ancient world. And it is because they are located within history. Location, location, location.
My second point is unnecessary details. A series of scholarly studies has shown that though Jews were located in many places across the Roman Empire, people’s names often tended to be geographically located. By observing literary and archaeological artifacts, a list of common names can be clearly identified. By narrowing down the most popular names in places that Jesus lived, traveled, and ministered, and by comparing these to the list from the studies, an interesting correlation can be seen. Just as we see today with popular names, a qualifier or nickname is often used. For example, notice that when Matthew lists the disciples in his gospel, certain names have a qualifier or nickname and others do not. Simon called Peter and Andrew his brother and James the son of Zebedee and John his brother, Philip and Bartholomew, Thomas and Matthew the tax collector, James the son of Alfus and Thaddius, Simon the Zealot and Judas a Scariot who also betrayed him. As we would expect, the most popular names are those that have an added description. When we compare the most popular names in Judea and Galilee during the first century with the names we see listed in places like the biblical gospels, we find that all of the names with qualifiers match with what we’d assume if they were actually written in the time and place they claimed to be narrating. In contrast, the Gospel of Judas only has two names that would fit, Jesus and Judas, but contains a host of other characters whose names match not with first century Galilee and Judea, like biblical gospels, but with names that were popular in Egypt during the second and third centuries. Consider how difficult it would be for someone living outside of the locations and times that these events took place to get the right names with the right qualifiers. We have four biblical gospels with four different named authors. And yet each gets this test of naming, frequency, and attribution right every time. A test in standard that the apocryphal and gnostic gospels simply do not pass. And it’s unnecessary details like names that we often skip over because they’re just names to us that give us a picture of the reliability of what we see going on. If I were to ask you to write a document about 1980s Toronto, Canada, and I want you to pass it off as something that was original to 1980s Toronto, Canada, what is the likelihood that you would get the names that were popular in say a particular area of the city during that time in that place. It’s probably harder than you might think. When I was going to high school, there were a lot of mics and there were a lot of Sarah. And so you would you would disambiguate them, right? tall Sarah, short Sarah, you know, you use the first letter of their last name, Mike M, Mike T. And that’s what we see happening. And yet, unlike these other documents that you might have heard of, the Gospel of Thomas, Gospel of Peter, Gospel of Mary, Gospel of Judas, which do have some names that fit, but then other names that just don’t fit and actually pinpoint and locate them in different times and different places. And ultimately those non-biblical gospels fail because not only can we not connect the internal evidence like that of name correspondence, but we know that these were written in times when the falsely attributed names on them, Mary, Thomas, Peter, Philip, Judas were dead. They could not have written them. And yet we see both the internal evidence from the biblical gospels, Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John, and the external evidence pointing to these unnecessary details giving us a picture of their accuracy. Location, location, location, and unnecessary details.
And last one I want to point to is what are referred to as undesigned coincidences. What does that mean? An undesigned coincidence is an instance when you have one or more independent historical accounts and they interlock in such a way that would be unexpected if they were simply fabricated wholesale. Well, what does that mean? I don’t know. I’m not really listening either. So, let me give you an example from the Gospels because we have stories within these four biographies of Jesus’s life that you might notice are either the same or very similar. And there is one story that is in all four gospels. It’s the feeding of the 5000. If you look at John’s account of the feeding of the 5,000, you see that it says, “Lifting up his eyes,” this is talking about Jesus then and seeing that a large crowd was coming toward him. Jesus said to Philillip, “Where are we to buy bread so that the people may eat?” Now, I’m going to ask you a strange question. Why did Jesus ask Philillip? Think about it. Philip is an unlikely character to ask. He’s not one of the main disciples, the inner circle, Peter, James, and John. He’s not even someone who we have historical context for someone that could very well have known about, say, the goings on economically. Matthew was a tax collector. Levi, he would have known about the, you know, economic status of particular areas, what the taxes were for something like food to buy bread. And Judas is said to have carried the money bag. He would have known how much money they had that when they get their flat whites before they go into the temple that that how much they’d have left afterwards. But that’s not what Jesus does. He doesn’t ask someone like Matthew. He doesn’t ask someone like Judas. He asks Philillip. If we go back to Luke’s account of Jesus’s life and this particular story, we see that on their return, the apostles told him all they had done and took him with them and drew apart to a town called Betha. When the crowds learned it, they followed him and he welcomed them and spoke to them of the kingdom of God, excuse me, of God and cured those who are in need of healing. So where we’ve just previously from John heard about the who, Luke tells us the where this particular event happened in Beth Sida. Now if we go back to John a little bit earlier in John we see this very interesting passage that says so they came to Philillip who was from Basida in Galilee and asked him sir we wish to see Jesus isn’t that interesting Phillip is from Basida okay so if we go back both John and Luke tell the same story Luke doesn’t mention Philip in this context at all but Luke does tell us the location of the event. John doesn’t mention Betha as the setting of the miracle but does tell us that is where Philip is from. So why did Jesus turn to Philillip? He was a local. But it is only by putting these stories together side by side can we understand how to answer the question from John 6:5. Why did Jesus ask Phillip? These are undesigned coincidences. These are things that in a court of law you’re looking for in terms of eyewitness testimony. The differences in the details that ultimately lend to their credibility because people who make these stories up don’t give ancillary details that end up working together to show levels of truthfulness and credibility. This is something we find throughout the gospels in Acts or in the Old Testament in writings where we have the same stories in different perspectives like 1 and 2 Chronicles, 1 and 2 Kings. Undesigned coincidences allow us to gain a picture and the understanding of the trustworthiness of what the Bible is telling us in how it operates. And there are so many examples of these proofs for the New Testament. These are only a few. In fact, you might be asking, Wes, how many of these do you think there are? How many do you think there are? Billions and billions and billions and billions and billions and billions and billions and billions and billions and billions and billions and billions and billions and billions and billions and billions and billions and billions and billions and billions and billions and billions and billions and thank you Mr. Trump. Yes, not quite billions and billions but there are a whole lot. There are enough that give us grounds for a fairminded individual to say we’re dealing with something here. So although I’ve only outlined a few, I think we can say that even just looking at a few, give us if we are analyzing the data fairly and looking at the fact that what we have now is what the original authors wrote and the data bears that out and that what we have in those writings is accurate eyewitness testimony from things like location, location, location, unnecessary details, and undesigned coincidence. that this leaves us with confidence regarding its content. You can have trust based on the evidence that this is something that is attempting to con convey actual historical information that it is reliable that it is what scholars refer to as communicating verimilitude which is a word you’re all going to use at the party next week. Veric similitude is what we as historians are looking for in a word that simply means the appearance of truth, likelihood, and probability. That’s what we find with the Bible.
However, if I were to finish my talk there and you were to walk out of this room and simply believe that the Bible was a collection of generally historically reliable documents that maybe even communicates eyewitness testimony of actual historical events, then I would have failed. I would have failed because the Bible is no less than that. But the Bible is so much more than that. Because the Bible in its 66 books is all communicating about a single individual and person and event. And we find the question about that person right in the middle of Mark’s biography of Jesus when Jesus turns to his disciples and he says, “Who do you say that I am?”
That’s the question that the entire Bible is coming down to. That’s the question that the prophets are predicting hundreds of years before Jesus is even born. And then Jesus comes on the scene and there’s this expectation of someone who’s going to change the reality of God’s people. And Jesus makes claims, audacious claims, claims to be God himself. And then he predicts his own death and resurrection. And he does it. And people who rise from the dead have more credibility and authority than people who don’t rise from the dead. And so that means something. That means something that beyond the evidence, beyond the historical details, the undesigned coincidences and big fancy words like varyilitude, it means that if we can have confidence that the question that we need to ask of who do you say that I am is an imperative question. And so tonight, I want you to think simply on the basis of this small sliver of insufficient evidence that this stammering tongue has communicated tonight about who you say he is. Who do you say Jesus is?
What do we make of this man from Nazareth whose life has split our world in two? Could there be truth to all the rumors of what he means for me and you? Some call him a sage, a prophet, a sorcerer, saying history is shrouded in legendary tales. But Jesus’s genius, it’s beyond the pen of phrase mongers. His story stacking up where conspiracy fails as celebrated as the centerpiece of civilization, lighting a legacy of true humanity a glow. And no mere man or myth could fake such moral beauty. Inspiring faith is the life beyond all shadow. So come one and all who tire of darkness and come and see what his friends and followers speak. Step Aresh into the pages of these gospels. Who is Jesus? He may just be the one you seek at Christ Chronicles. Start with nativity. A creation’s author entering our story with creativity, angelic enunciations, Mary’s musical magnifications, animal accommodations, and celestial celebrations. Heaven’s high king swaddled in an earthly manger. Love incarnate, worshiped by shepherd and stranger. Humanity’s hopes long foretold across scripture and sky. Now breathing in Bethlehem. Heaven and earth united in a newborn’s cry. The word became flesh. And that word grew from a babe to a boy. From a teenager to a tradesman, escaping murderous machinations, confounding elders interpretations, drinking deep of our temptations, preparing for our souls true liberation. Yes, the word grew, laying down Joseph’s tools to start making all things new. Jesus goes public. Scores of people searching for truth designs, swelling into crowds for Christ’s sermons and signs. The tables of religious hypocrisy flipped by this living revelation of heaven’s true script. Blind eyes sited, lame legs rided, crooked hearts straightened, lost loved ones awakened. Forgiveness to soft-hearted sinners extended. A suffering’s reign prophesied to one day be ended. His message of mercy staying angry hands from violence. His aura of authority setting raging storms to silence. But Christ’s enigmatic deeds prompting disciples to say, “Who is this Nazarene that even the wind and the waves obey?”
But not all our evil likes being exposed. So evil sets about scheming, afraid of being deposed, taken captive by a kiss of a treacherous friend. Once again, God betrayed in the garden, left abandoned in the end. Creation’s judged, denied justice through shady trials, drinking deep of rejection through Peter’s denials. the heir to David’s throne, cursed with thorns for a crown, opting to take up his cross so he could lay his life down. Jesus dies at Calvary, God’s redemptive plan in brutal disguise. Heaven remaining silent for Christ’s derelict cries. Creation’s maker now mourned by darkened skies, leading everyone to wonder, were his claims empty lies? Or could the corpse of our hope from the grave still rise? And three days later, Jesus comes alive. Defeating death by resurrection. Earth’s foretaste of heaven’s future insurrection. Persuading doubters to believe on his wounds inspection. Christ’s true identity now an open secret beyond objection. Who is Jesus? Jesus is the friend of sinners whose love-born sacrifice can offer us salvation. The king of kings turned humble carpenter who can craft a new creation. eternal son, the great I am stepping forth to redeem this paradise lost. Our forgiveness, freedom, and future all paid for by Jesus who says, “Come to me freely all you who thirst and drink without cost.”
MODERATOR: …now you get to scrutinize those claims. And we’ve come to the part of the evening which tends to be everyone’s favorite where we’re going to ask away at many of the claims that Jesus makes and give you an opportunity to put forth your curious questions and feed them Wes’s way. So, as we mentioned before, I’d love to invite you to come over to the microphone, line up, get ready for your question. We’ll have a couple of our team, David and James, just checking with to make sure that anyone who is visiting tonight, wrestling with the Christian story, maybe skeptical, will get priority and move to the front. But just while we’re setting up, let me give you a couple of words of encouragement about Q&A. Now, this is not a slight on Wes at all. He’s phenomenal. But Q&A will always leave you disappointed because the kinds of questions that people ask deserve way more than a simple two minute answer from people that aren’t necessarily experts in very much at all. At best, what we might try to do is be theological or apologetics GPS. You don’t walk into the GP’s office and walk out healed. No, you walk into the GP’s office and hopefully have a little bit more of a diagnosis on what’s going on when you leave. and they point you either towards a remedy or a specialist where you can go and get more help. And that’s largely what we’ll do tonight. Try and say one or two things by way of diagnosis and where to go and how to think about something, something that helps us, but then maybe point you to a resource. It could be one of the books that Wes recommends out at the Wandering Seller bookstore tonight that everyone will visit on their way out. It could be a video from Wes’s page or Wesleyhuff.com, an infographic on there. It may even be a humble video from questioning Christianity, but we’ll try and make sure we can connect with as many of these questions as we possibly can. Are we ready? Great. It’ be great to introduce yourself and then ask away.
JULIANO (Audience): Hi, Wes. Hi, Dan. My name is Juliano. I’m a believer and follower of Jesus. I just I have a question about ancient timelines and histories. So, some would say there’s timelines and histories out there from ancient civilizations such as I’ve heard about the Egypt an a little bit about the ancient Egyptian timeline and how it might be contrary to the Hebrew Bible. I was just curious about your thoughts around that and I know like obviously there’s intersections with histories to do with the Babylonian Empire and the Assyrian empires. Yeah. If you’ve compared any of the other ancient histories and how they compare to the Hebrew Bible. Thank you.
WES: Yeah, great question. Thank you so much for asking. I think what we can say and I say this as a non-egyptologist and a nonarchchaeologist but as someone who is very interested in ancient cultures and linguistics, languages and how the ancient world communicated itself. What we need to keep in the framework of understanding is that we actually know very very little about what happened within the ancient world. a fraction of what actually took place. And we’re continually expanding our understanding of the ancient world. And history is not mathematics. We cannot have a 100% certainty like we can with 2 plus 2 equaling four. It’s a probability. It’s an inference to the best explanation based on the evidence that we can look at from written sources and from artifacts that we dig out of the ground. But ultimately we’re going to have an insufficient answer that we can have confidence levels and gradients of confidence to say this most likely happened. But other things saying we’re not sure about this. And timelines are one of those things that are a little bit fuzzy. Some areas are a little bit clearer than others, but ultimately when we’re dealing with when certain things happened, especially the further back we go, we we have to be a little bit cautious and communicate some humility in our communicating of what actually happened. A key example of this is Egyptologists for a long time assumed that they had a good picture of who the pharaohs were at approximate times and locations and who really wasn’t important. And for a long time there was this particular pharaoh that they were like ah we’re not sure about him. He’s probably not important. We see very little of him in terms of our actual explanations of the king list within ancient Egypt. His name was Tutankhamun. But there was a particular individual, Howard Carter, who just could not get out of his mind that we have so little about this individual. He’s a footnote in these lists. And so he goes trying to find this tomb and eventually does.
And not only does he find it, but he realizes this individual is not a footnote in the understanding of ancient Egyptology. Tutankhamun was a very important, very well-known pharaoh for his time. And so we have to deal with the evidence as it comes. And sometimes things are completely rewritten. And so saying that in context to something like the timeline of the Bible, we have incredible ability to look at the time frames of the histories that were projected for us in the Old Testament and grant that for a long time, a very long time, our first evidence for ancient Babylonian, Assyrian, and Hittite individuals was the Bible.
If you were to go into the middle ages and ask a monk, who is Sennacherib? He would open to the book of Kings and he would see that Sennacherib was the king of Assyria who put siege on Jerusalem and destroyed the next important city, a city called Lakish in Jerusalem in Israel in Judea. Now, it wasn’t until the 1840s that we dug up the throne room of Sennacherib, king of Assyria, and found out that actually the annals that were recorded there correspond directly with what we see written in first and 2 Kings. But it is the fact that time and time again the timelines of the Bible even if we can we’re not sure archaeologically that we have firm evidence we actually I think can give the benefit of the doubt a lot of the times to the text of the Bible despite what we see elsewhere. And I wouldn’t actually say that there are there’s anything overtly that contradicts what we see in the timeline of the Bible. And let me just just finish on this. I’m not an archaeologist but I do have friends who are archaeologists. And one of the things that they continually tell me is, Wes, when we’re going into the Middle East, when we’re going to places like Israel and Iraq and Syria, we take a few key documents that give us a picture of what’s going on geographically and historically. One is the writings of this Romano Jewish writer named Josephus from the latter half of the first century. The other is the Bible. Why? Because continually we find that the people and the places and the times give an accurate account or even if they’re not a believer, if they’re skeptical, an approximate account as to where they should be looking and what they should be looking for.
DAN (Moderator): So good. Thank you.
ASHER (Audience): Hey, Wes. My question is that if all of creation has been corrupted, wouldn’t that include language as well? I like to frame this in how it relates to my degree, which is in psychology. It’s called signal detection theory that anything we try and measure, there’s going to be a little bit of noise sensitive the instruments. And I can see that with the disciples and Jesus that he says stuff so plainly and they don’t get it. But how would an atheist then have any hope of interpreting this text given if you were to say that we can trust the Holy Spirit for them to then be able to interpret this. In addition I would say that also the Christian is also finding it difficult in some areas for instance like the word Elohim and how sometimes it’s plural sometimes it’s singular, the word daily in give us today our daily bread has been lost in a little bit so there’s more noise to that Greek word now. And I find it frustrating that we often like the the book of the Bible is all about grace. And yet there is no grace given to this interpretation. It seems always like has to be inherent or infallible.
WES: Yeah. Let me say, and thank you very much for that question, that when we’re dealing with something like linguistics, it’s always important to keep in mind that the way that we derive that we render the text is based on our understanding of the language, but the language within its context and understanding how that language operates both inside the document that we’re written. that’s it’s written in and outside. Greek is not a magical Christian language. It’s a language that we have a lot a ton of examples of writings outside of it. And so we can use reference points to look at something like classical Greek and coin a Greek which is the Greek that the New Testament is written in common Greek to give us a framework of how certain words operate within their sentences. But it is within the particular place that those words are found that gives us the meaning. So like you said Elohim in Hebrew means God or God’s. It operates in both a singular and a plural depending on the context. But when God says in somewhere like Isaiah chapter 40 that I am God there is no other and articulating absolute monotheism we cannot read that I am God’s there are no other gods it doesn’t make sense and so it is the context that merits that based on what’s referred to as ex Jesus which is looking at the language and pulling out its meaning ex Jesus means literally to bring out the opposite is of Jesus to read in. And so we look at an exegetical reading. How do we bring out the intention of what is being communicated by the author? What is the author meaning to communicate to us? And if we’re coming to either a rendering or a conclusion based on interpretation that is foreign to what we see the author communicating, then we have a problem. We also use interpretation. This is often referred to in theological circles as hermeneutics, which you all say, who’s Herman and why do we care? But what hermeneutics means is it’s the art of interpretation. And sometimes, as I think the question was kind of alluding to, there is room for different interpretations of a particular text based on potential ambiguity. That does exist within the Bible. I would say that the Bible is inherent in so far as I believe that God cannot heir and the Bible is written as its primary author being the Holy Spirit. That doesn’t negate that there are human authors that Moses, David, Peter, Paul, James, Jude are the authors. But undergirding that you know there are some Bibles that have Jesus’s words in red. But you may not know this, but all Bibles have the Holy Spirit’s words in black. It’s one of my favorite features about just everybody agrees. And so I think there is an aspect of saying if God cannot heir, then that which he gives to us in what it intends to say does not heir. And that doesn’t mean that the interpretation that we derive from that isn’t fallible. When Moses is hearing God’s commands on Mount Si, Moses’s ability to hear God is fallible. And that doesn’t change that when he eventually communicates the law to the Israelites, to God’s chosen people, that that law is infallible. Right? We are fallible human beings. And yet, we can still communicate things that are inherent in that they do not heir. I can have a phone book. I don’t think those exist anymore. But a phone book could technically be inherent. All the phone numbers could correspond with the people that are actually listed as that being their phone number. That doesn’t mean that it’s inspired, but it means that fallibility doesn’t always negate the ability for it to be correct. And we trust fallible resources and and materials and individuals all the time. And yet there’s a theological component to this being inherent, infallible, because of inspiration, but also because of the language understandings that people have committed their lives to over the last 2,000 years of interpreting the Bible and then the Jews before that in terms of looking at the Hebrew Bible who likewise provide us with commentaries in the ancient world that we can have confidence on a great deal and also grant that there’s ambiguity, but the ambiguity doesn’t negate the central message of what’s being communicated within this book.
DAN: If you want to pick up more on that, we’ve got a great video called Why Isn’t the Bible more clear? Which looks at maybe some of the reasons that God actually gives us a book where some things are clear, but maybe some are more ambiguous and maybe his goals in allowing us to wrestle with this spiritual curriculum to form us to become more like Jesus. So, check that out.
LACHLAN (Audience): Yeah. Thank you. Good night guys. My name is Lachlan. Hey Lachlan. I’ve built quite a relationship with God over the course of my life. But I have a lot of questions about the Trinity. Sorry it’s not about the veracity of the Bible. I know that’s your whole talk tonight. But basically I don’t understand the distinction between God the Father and God the Son. I pray to God the Father. Mhm. And I don’t know why, like a lot of the people I know in my life, they pray to Jesus. And I’ve built quite the relationship praying to God and trying to get to know him. And I don’t really know why I need Jesus.
WES: Yeah. Well, thank you first and foremost for your transparency to ask that question. I think there’s an a level that we can all relate to what you just said in the sense that there are aspects of who God is that we will never truly grasp. And thank goodness that our salvation salvation is not based on a theological exam because I think I myself would personally fail. I’m not going to speak for everybody in the room.
DAN: I can vouch for that.
WES: Okay. Thank you. It’s an IPS switch thing. I don’t want to But I think you know what we see within scripture and we have to be honest with what we see within scripture is that what we see described is that God is complex within his unity. Yeah. And that continually we have statements that are repeated statements like Deuteronomy 346 which is sometimes referred to as the shema here. O Israel the Lord is God. The Lord is one God. And this is a statement that has been repeated since the time of Moses to modern Orthodox Jews today. Every morning and every evening here, O Israel, the Lord is God. The Lord is one God. And yet we have these examples of God describing himself in a complex nature that he’s ruling and reigning in heaven, but he is in a physical presence on the top of the ark of the covenant on the mercy seat. And we have stories like we see in Genesis 18 where two angels and one individual identified as Yahweh as the God of the Bible shows up to Abraham’s tent and they dialogue with Abraham about what’s going to transpire at Sodom and Gomorrah. The two angels leave to go deal with Abraham’s relatives in Sodom and Gomorrah. And then the extended conversation with between Abraham and God eventually has God leaving in some sort of physical form. And then it says it has this very interesting passage in Genesis 19 where it says, “And then Yahweh in heaven rain fire and brimstone from Yahweh on earth.”
What? There’s only one God. There isn’t two Yahwehs. So what’s going on?
I would posit that if God was fully comprehensible, if you could understand all the intricacies of who God is within both his being and his character, it’s probably a God that you made up. That as we are complex, God is even infinitely more complex. And there is an aspect that theolog the theologians talk about in what’s sometimes described as understanding and comprehending in that I can understand when the Bible talks about eternity as a long period of time in my kind of finite thinking. But what does time without end mean? I can’t comprehend that. I can’t I can’t wrap my head around that. But what do we see communicated to about who God is? is that the father is described as Yahweh God in his honors, attributes, his names, his deeds, and he’s given the seat of the almighty. Jesus is described and given the honors, the attributes, the names, the deeds, and the seat of the Almighty. And the spirit is given the honors, the attributes, the names, the deeds, and the seat of the Almighty. It spells out hands, by the way. It’s an acronym. I did that so you could remember it. I didn’t come up with that. Two brilliant scholars named Rob Bowman and Ed Kamachowski came up with that in a book that you’re all going to read after this called the incarnate Christ and his critics. But what we get from that is that we see this happening. The father, the son, and the spirit all being described with those qualities of Yahweh. And so we say, okay, there’s one being of God. Being describes what you are, but there are three persons. Person describes who you are.
This chair has being, right? It exists. I didn’t walk over and say, “Excuse me, Mr. chair. Can I sit on you? Do you mind that?” Right?
Because it doesn’t have personhood. But it has being. Don’t believe me. I’ll throw it at you and you can find out.
And preacher. Yeah. Right. And yet Dan is a being. He’s a human being, but he is also a person. He’s Dan Patterson. Right.
He is one in being and one in person. And as the creator of us as human beings who inhabit a personhood, I would I would posit that even in our finite understanding that we cannot truly comprehend that the God of creation, I think it would merit that he is more complex than that. And even in all the things that we cannot and do not understand about the God of the Bible, we still can come to this text and say what I see here is describing something that maybe I don’t fully understand, but that I can submit to my submit myself to humbly in saying I don’t understand all the details, but what I do see is something that is wonderful and that is beautiful and that the father sends the son and the son goes willingly of his own accord and he dies in our place through the power of the spirit in order to give us life. That the message of the gospel and salvation is inherently trinitarian. It is the three operating co-equally and co-eternally in a set of living loving relationships. And even if I don’t understand how that parses out in every way, I can submit my to it myself to it because I believe that this is true.
ELIJAH (Audience): Hi guys, my name’s Elijah. Thanks for being here tonight. Reading the Bible for the first time, it’s natural to assume that Paul’s epistles were written after the Gospels and the eyewitness accounts of Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John. However, most scholars now agree that the Gospels were all written—sorry, that the Gospels were written many years after Paul’s letters. Given this, how can we be sure that Paul’s theology and interpretation of Jesus did not influence the stories of Jesus that were passed down orally over many decades?
WES: Yeah, great question. So I think we can unanimously say that that is a reality. Paul is our earliest source material for who Jesus is in terms of descriptions of this character, this itinerate rabbi named Jesus of Nazareth. And it’s then after that that we see the oral tradition, what’s sometimes referred to as the charurrima. And that’s just a word that means the oral tradition that’s floating around within the early Jesus community that is eventually written down by these four individuals Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John. I what I think we can say is that, you know, Paul’s letters range in their dates. And what we see within those is testified to in both the angles of what Paul is doing and how he’s communicating to these early Christian communities that then mirror the person and identity of who Jesus is. I don’t think they’re in competition with one another. I think they fill in the beauty of the complex picture of what we see within who Jesus is. Now, some people argue that, you know, why did it take them so long to write these things down? And we ask that today because we live in a hyperiterate culture, but the ancient world was not as literate as we are today. And in fact, memorization and rearticulation of stories and facts was the norm back then. Writing was incredibly expensive and incredibly arduous and took a lot of time and very few people could do it really well. When Luke says that he’s undertaking to write an orderly account, I think what he’s saying there is that some people have attempted and they’ve written a not very orderly account in the past. And interestingly enough, if we assume that something like the Gospel of Mark comes before Luke, if you learn Greek and you start with something that’s very simple like the Gospel of Mark, you find that it is not very orderly in the way that it’s written. Lots of “and then,” lots of “and then”—it’s like my son who tells me stories: daddy and then I went to the park and then I came home and then I ate a pizza and then I—you know—“and then, and then, and then.” This is called parataxis. And so we see that and I think Luke, who is a doctor, who is educated, who has a literacy level within the language of Greek, looks at Mark and he says okay that’s great that story is true it’s not written as well as I think I could do and that’s not to say that he’s trying to improve upon the message—he’s writing down for this individual Theophilus an orderly account so that he can communicate from the eyewitness testimony maybe things that are not included in some of these previous gospels. So I don’t think although none of these documents are given dates internally that that is a problem with their ability to communicate early eyewitness testimony and we can source that from things like we talked about tonight from the location information that’s located within the actual documents from unnecessary details from undesigned coincidences—all of these scream early eyewitness testimony—and then Paul, although he’s writing before the gospels in some instances, is likewise giving the level of credibility to what we see within the time frame and descriptions of the biographical accounts of Jesus.
MODERATOR: That’s great.
OHN (Audience): There you go. My name is John. Thank you for what you’ve shared here tonight. I do feel though like as though you have glossed over a little bit over some of the words and terminologies. For example, you brought up John 1 vers1 talking about how God was the word in the Greek. And I do find that the definition of a logos which was used as word is a bit more layered than what seems to be put across within the goss like like in that like from like how we like translate it to say it means a word. Like it has like a lot like it’s used even in like a lot of academia language today. For example, using terms like numerology meaning like the study of or understanding of neurology with ology meaning logos which is the word part of it and also used in business. So, for example, logos meaning like the exact same thing, but it’s just like something you look at and it’s to do with like an understanding and full perspective of what you’re looking at and how you’re interacting, but hopefully I’m making sense, not jumbling up my words too much. But yeah, I wanted to get into the like as is as has been discussed a few times already tonight about how the gospels were written like in the second century BC. Sorry. Sorry. So AD. Anyway, so I just wanted to bring up like you know like Jesus spoke a lot about taking up your cross and following him and at least in I don’t know if it’s Aramaic but at least in Hebrew cross is like me I know that it wasn’t translated in Hebrew though it was translated in Greek but I do find that the Um, yeah, I’m just getting to it. Like, sorry. Sorry, just I lost my track there. So I think I actually understand what you’re saying in terms of the complexity of how do we authentically render a text that has complexness to its language. I was just like like I was saying like I think it’s likely like even with it being Britain after the second century CE, people usually point to the put by the evidence of Jesus dying on the cross as what’s his I forgot the name of the elite fellow who was speaking to or giving reason for Nero killing off Christians and talking about the reising of the Christians under well speaking about the reason of it being was that Christ died under Pontius Pilot. But I was like more so wondering like isn’t it like also very likely as someone who has experienced a lot of rumors going around about myself and just seeing how quickly word spread like even schools and my jobs and everything people just like spread rumors like extremely quickly. Like what’s the likelihood that well Jesus were saying that you know take up your cross and follow him that just somehow just became a thing which everyone was like saying and then through Chinese whispers of sorts it just becomes like well oh yeah well he died on the cross and then like yeah but yeah I appreciate that question would go along with it just like Paul so is it is it just this rumor that developed. Jesus said one thing but over time it develops and maybe the crucifixion is a later invention. What do you think?
WES: Yeah. So this is what we sometimes refer to as mythological drift within historiography that as time goes on and you get these apocryphal and haggio which the stories that start to pop up.
I think what some of the things that we see within the gospels in particular is that we often look at them and we think that there’s a embellished nature because they talk about things like miracles. All you have to do though is read some of these other gospels that I referenced in terms of the Gnostic gospels and actually you find what true embellishment is. There’s one of my favorite stories is a story about Paul where he is walking down the road and he finds a lion who has his head his mane caught in a thicket and the lion is clearly uncomfortable. And so he releases the lion from the thicket and the lion is very appreciative of this fact. And so they’re walking down the road and Paul is preaching the gospel to this lion. And so this lion is just so moved by the message that he’s heard that he receives the gospel and comes to faith and is baptized and they part ways and then later on you know Paul finds himself in the coliseum and in the coliseum who happens to walk out the good old Christian lion. Now this is embellishment. this is what we see and can say, okay, like there’s something going on here. And in fact, compared to a lot of these stories that we find in the later centuries, the gospels are actually very matter of fact. And this comes across in the way that they’re communicated. Why do I not think that mythological drift is taking place? I do not think that it’s taking place because we see so many instances where say for example Jesus is crucified in Jerusalem and then his immediate disciples go out and come back to Jerusalem to preach that message on Pentecost. This is ground zero. There are people who would have seen Jesus’s crucifixion and they’re going around to the scene of the crime saying, “He’s resurrected.” There could have been people who would have said, okay, let’s go check the tomb. We saw him die. We know he was buried. We can fact check these things. And yet, that’s continually what they’re doing. They’re going back to places where if you wanted to make things up, you wouldn’t go there. And it’s in the lifetime of the eyewitnesses. Now Luke does this and John does this very well where they will name people in a way that they don’t necessarily have to. I believe it’s Luke who says that you know Simon ofSirene has two sons and one of them is named this and he does that because what he’s doing is that is an ancient form of citation. It’s most likely that some of these characters that are kind of background reference are individuals who are well known within the early Christian community and the authors are saying don’t believe me go ask them and so there are two layers of mythological drift in there’s one is embellishment and the other is you know what’s that sorry invention invention yeah do does this communicate that the author is actually trying to do their due diligence in the first audience being able to actually verify what is going on. And I think within kind of the narrative story arc of something like where the the disciples are preaching and communicating this message in terms of people being able to actually have understood and fact check those things and the names and places and people that they’re describing that could have kind of tipped off someone in a very tangible way to say, you know, I don’t know about that, but let’s go talk to so and so because they may very well have more details on this within a time frame that amounts to the memory, the early eyewitness memory still living within the lifetime of people who knew Jesus and people who knew people who knew Jesus.
DAN (Moderator): And I think maybe there was just a couple of factual statements in the question that was asked as well that might be worth clarifying just on the dating of the gospels. It was the second century AD was this is the thought where they come from. But the gospels that we have in the New Testament, Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John, are all first century gospels, which no critical scholar is going to contest. And you would certainly say the arguments for at least Matthew, Mark, and Luke, the synoptic gospels, being pre70 AD, I think, are far stronger than the arguments they come after 70 AD. And so, you’re talking within living memory when these things are actually being penned. And there is a statement in 1 Corinthians 15 that Paul makes, this creed that he quotes there in verses 3 and four and five. And scholars will point critical scholars even from the Jesus seminar back in the 80s and 90s and they’ll say look these date to within 3 months to 5 years after the resurrection of Jesus. The early Christians claim that Christ died for our sins in accordance with the scriptures that he was buried that he was raised on the third day in accordance with the scriptures and that he appeared. And so that’s a very early reference to the crucifixion of Jesus rather than just some later development which is not something we have for the vast majority of any other ancient individuals within history. So, I mentioned like we do have good information, source information for individuals like Tiberius. But if we’re talking about someone like Alexander the Great, our earliest comprehensive biographies of Alexander the Great come about 750 years after Alexander the Great. And that doesn’t mean that they don’t contain source material about what Alexander the Great was actually like. But this is the norm. This is the norm for ancient characters. The fact that we have some biographies, never mind four biographies, all corresponding and giving things like undesigned coincidences is actually unheard of in ancient source historioggraphical information. Yeah, we’ve got a video that might be helpful on did the resurrection stories develop like legends. I recommend go check that out on the QC channel. Great. What’s your question, sir?
JUSTIN (Audience): How’s it going, guys? Hey, mate. Name is Justin. Awesome to have you here, man. It’s great to have a mind like yours in the room and your mate and hey, I’ll take it. Sorry. He’s been giving you stuff all night, so I thought I’d throw something back. It’s in his biography. Wes is mean. I have a pretty hard question. It’s to do with the passing of Charlie. When Jesus says, revenge is mine, it’s hard to something happened to my partner, you know, or even me and my kids were left, it’d be hard not to want revenge. How did how does man deal with that? You know, how do you find answers in the Bible and even just in comfort of Jesus’s words? Revenge is mine when it’s something so hard like that.
WES: Yeah. Well, first and foremost, let me just communicate my condolences and say I’m so sorry for what happened to your partner, whatever that is.
JUSTIN: No, no, no.
DAN: He’s saying if something happened, he would
JUSTIN: if something happened to your partner.
WES: Yeah. like Charlie. So Charlie’s horrible passing and like
DAN: Thanks for clarifying that. I see what you mean now. I’m getting it. Yeah. Yeah. Okay. Well, I’m glad that’s not the case. To be fair, he’s unbelievably jet-lagged.
JUSTIN: Yeah. No, I get that. I get that. Yeah.
WES: It’s a good question. I mean, when we
DAN: Just before you get into it, I don’t want to see that coin on eBay, by the way.
WES: When we look at things that communicate genuine heartache that communicate injustice, I think what’s unique about the God of this book is that the God of the Bible is not the elusive God of dismissant God of theism. that the God of the Bible can actually relate to feeling injustice personally because the God of the Bible sent his one and only son, the only innocent person that has ever walked this planet who was murdered. And I think to a certain degree when we look to heaven and we say, “God, I am frustrated. I’m angry. I am just completely disgusted with injustice in the world. I think God can look down at us and say, “Me, too. It killed my son.” And there’s an aspect of this was part of God’s plan that God draws straight lines with crooked sticks. And I think we see that even in the instance of Charlie in the amount of people communicating on social media on something like X and saying, “I never really thought about the Bible, but I’m seeing these clips of this individual talking about his own faith and that’s moving me.” God is using this. There is no purposeless evil in this world that is outside of God’s control. And so the God of the Bible is unique in that he doesn’t just sympathize with our hurt and our pain and our suffering, but he empathizes with it. Because the God of the Bible sent his son, the second person of the Trinity, and then that son, that God stepped into humanity and personally experienced heartache and loss and betrayal and murder because the expectation in the first century was that the Messiah was going to save God’s people from the Romans, not be murdered by the Romans. And so the upside down nature of what took place within the life of the Messiah is something that allows God to say, “You’re hurting me, too.” And relate to that and also say that Jesus didn’t stay in the grave, that he rose from the dead and he conquered sin and death. You know, I heard this story of this famous pastor from the United States whose wife died, passed away, and as he was driving with his kids from the funeral and trying to help them understand what just took place, looked over at a lane at the next lane where a big transport truck was driving down the road and turned to his son and said, “Would you rather be hit by the rock or the shadow? And his son said, “The shadow.” And he said, “Son, Jesus was hit by the truck so your mother could be hit by the shadow.” And that that allows us to experience not the true penalty of death because Christ took that true penalty. And so we when we see injusted the injustice that genuinely moves us, God speaks into that and says,”I get that and I am making all things new. So just wait.
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RYAN (Audience): Hey Wes, it’s good to have you here. My question is this. The Catholic and Orthodox churches teach a gospel of faith and works. Would they have a false gospel? And if someone is trusting in two things, Jesus plus say like baptism or obeying God’s commandments or saying sorry for your sins, if they’re trusting in Jesus plus, would they be saved?
WES: Yes. Good question. Here’s what I would say. I genuinely think that there are bornagain believers within the Roman Catholic Church and the Greek Orthodox Church. But it is not because of but in spite of what those churches are often teaching. And as a convictional Protestant, not a convenient Protestant, I am not attending a Baptist church out of convenience because it happens to be the closest to my house. I convictionally believe that the process of the Protestant Reformation was a God- orained thing that operated to retrieve the true gospel and that the testimony of scripture is that you are saved not on the basis of anything you have done but by what Jesus did. And by trusting in what you have done, what you’re saying is really, I can do better. I can accomplish something. And Jesus didn’t really have to die. If Jesus is merely a moral example for you to follow and do things, then you don’t need a savior because you can save yourself. You can do good things. And we need to be really careful of that message. The gospel is not earned, it’s received. And so because it is not earned, I do not think that there will be anyone in heaven who believes that they merited what they’re getting in terms of entering into the presence of God in eternity. And there’s a danger there. But I think there can be genuine believers in those communities because they’re still reading this. But they will most likely have to come to terms with at a certain point they will have to leave those institutions. I truly believe that because if you’re trusting in your works, you’re not submitting fully to what the gospel is. It’s received. it’s not achieved. And that’s important. It’s important for what grace truly means. That you are saved by faith through grace and not of works so that no one can boast. It’s all Jesus all the time. And so I am not saved by my works, but I am saved for my works. And so those works are not negated. They’re not not important. They are that thing which testifies to the salvation, the free gift that is given me. And it’s very very important. And so I pray and long for my brothers and sisters within the Roman Catholic, the Greek Orthod or the the the Eastern Orthodox, Oriental Orthodox communities because I think that a lot of them have a genuine longing for that which is true and for the gospel. But if they’re trying to earn that, they’re whether they know it or not, negating what the true message of the gospel is.
MODERATOR: I’m very sorry to say this is going to have to be our last question, everyone. So to be the bad guy, we’re going to have to close things off after this one. But there are hundreds of answers to many of the questions that you will have on the YouTube channels at Apologetics Canada and Wesley Huff and many other able defenders of the gospel. We’re going to hear the last question.
RYAN (Audience): Yeah, great answer. Thank you for that. My name is Ryan. People might know me from needgod.net. But my question for you was I appreciate the talk on the reliability of the Bible. It’s amazing what you said. How does the reliability of the Bible compare with the reliability of the Quran? Many Muslims say it’s been perfectly preserved. Do they have these unnecessary details and the other things you’re mentioning in your talk? If you can speak on that.
WES: Yeah, great question. For the sake of time, no. That’s the short answer, right? I think what we see with I mean the Quran is very different in that like I said, the Bible is 66 books written over a period of 1600 years on three different continents by close to 40 different authors. The Quran is one book written in one time, 7th century, in one place, Arabia, in one language, Hajescript Arabic.
And so in one sense, it’s not really fair to compare the Quran and the Bible because we’re comparing apples to orchards. There’s just so much more going on with the Bible. But when we look at what the Quran, which comes 600 years after Jesus communicates, what we see is that it’s claiming to communicate facts about very similar people in situations that the Bible is and yet makes a lot of errors and mistakes that scream lack of verilitude and credibility. It mixes up people and places in a way that just should be red flags for us. And ultimately in chapter 4 verse 157 denies one of the most easily verifiable events of ancient history which is the crucifixion of Jesus Christ. It says that they neither, talking about the Jews, they neither crucified him nor did he die, but it was made to appear to them. And it has the Jews boasting we killed Jesus, the Messiah, the son of Mary, which is a very strange thing to say. If the Jews believed that and thought he was the Messiah, they wouldn’t have killed him. So, it starts off with an error and then it goes on to completely deny that this event ever happened. And that is a problem for the Quran and one that has many Muslims that I sympathize painted into a corner and trying to defend it because even the most skeptical of scholars, individuals who say despite all the stuff we’ve talked about, we really tonight we can’t really have much reliability in the source information about who Jesus was. But we can know that he was crucified and died under the Roman governorship of Pontius Pilate. We can know that because of both what the Bible teaches and from sources outside of the Bible. And so the Quran denies that simple fact. And in doing so denies the reality of an event that we have an incredible level of confidence to say that this event actually happened. And then on top of that, the Quran time and time again talks about the previous scriptures that the Jews had, the Torah and the Gospel. And it says that these were documents that were given in the same nature as the revelation of the Quran. They were given with guidance and light. They were the Arabic word is natsal sent down in the same way that Moses was given the Torah and it was full of guidance and light. And Jesus was given the gospel and it was full of guidance and light. And then in chapter six of the Quran, it says, “And let the people of the gospel judge by what they have therein. And if they do not judge by what Allah has revealed to them, then they are the definantly disobedient. So it prefaces it by saying God sent the Torah to Moses. He sent the gospel to Jesus. And the people of the gospel, Christians, Dan and I, need to judge by what Allah has given, what who what God has given to us as Christians, that being the gospel. And if we don’t judge by using the gospel, then we are the definantly disobedient. Here’s the problem. When I do that, when I obey that, when I judge using the gospel and I use that as the lens by which I look into the Quran, I find the Quran has no understanding of the communication of what the gospel facts are historically or theologically. It denies its central precepts. And so if the Quran is true and it tells me as a Christian to judge by the gospel, then the Quran is false. And if the Quran is false, then the Quran is false. So the Quran has a dilemma. Because this is not just in one place. This is in multiple places throughout the Quran. Because I do not think the author of the Quran had any earthly idea what the Torah or the Gospel were and assumed that he knew. And that’s where we get stories from people, individuals named in our Bible like Abraham, like Moses, and even like Mary and Jesus and John the Baptist, but are drawing on sources not historically reliable that we know go back to the source material, but are often oral stories floating around 7th century Arabia, mostly folk tales and apocryphal campfire stories. from this time period of Jews and Christians and Zoroastrians, assuming those are what the gospel and the Torah are and then making these profound mistakes and then communicates in an effort to get the Jews and the Christians on board by saying, “I know what you have. It’s a revelation and what it says is like the revelation that I’m giving to you. So judge by what you have and judge it by what I’m giving you.” And it’s not until later when this book was translated into Arabic in its entirety that Muslims started to go, “Uhoh, we have a problem.”
And that’s where arguments about corruption come into view. And so the first part of the question is the Quran perfectly preserved? The answer is no. We have textual variants all throughout the manuscript tradition of the Quran in particular manuscripts. There are far fewer manuscripts. And what that does is in testifying to what I talked about tonight, the fewer manuscripts you have, the more you have to rely that those people get it right, the more manuscripts you have, the more you have the ability to compare and contrast and trace back the original text and have confidence in that. So there are layers of the nonreliability internally and externally to the Quran that communicate that by the same standard, this is true and that’s wrong.