Doctrines of The Bible - David Bernard
Doctrines of The Bible - David Bernard
Doctrines of The Bible - David Bernard
by David K. Bernard
The Bible
Since God exists, the Word of God must also, for would not
the Creator communicate with His creation? Since God creat-
ed us as rational beings and since He loves us enough to pro-
vide for us, surely He wishes to communicate with us and
thereby fulfill His purpose for creation. All intelligent beings
seek to communicate, and the Supreme Intelligence is no
exception.
We would expect God to record His message in writing, the
historic medium best suited for precision, preservation, and
propagation. And the following evidence convincingly
demonstrates that the Bible is the unique written Word of God
to man: (1) its unique claims, (2) self-vindicating authority,
(3) testimony of the apostles and prophets, (4) integrity of
Jesus Christ, who endorsed the Old Testament and commis-
sioned the writers of the New, (5) nature and quality of its
content, (6) moral superiority, (7) unity, despite more than
forty writers over 1,600 years, (8) lack of a credible alterna-
tive, (9) agreement with history, archeology, and science,
(10) indestructibility, (11) universality, (12) influence on
society, (13) witness of the Spirit, (14) life-changing power,
(15) fulfilled promises and miracles, (16) fulfilled prophe-
cies, and (17) lack of an alternative explanation for its origin.
We would certainly expect God’s Word to identify itself as
such, and each book of the Bible claims, either directly or indi-
rectly, to be the Word of God. Of all the books of the world’s
great religions, only one other book boasts of equal authori-
ty—the Koran—and its fanciful, contradictory content does
not support its claim. The world’s most moral book, the Bible,
would not proclaim the world’s biggest lie. The world’s
noblest and wisest man, Jesus, would not perpetrate the
world’s greatest hoax. No one but God could have authored
the Bible, for good beings would not falsely claim divine inspi-
ration, and evil beings would not teach such high morality.
The Bible is inspired of God, literally “God-breathed.” “All
scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for
doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in right-
eousness” (II Timothy 3:16). Holy men wrote as the Holy
Spirit moved them (II Peter 1:21). Inspiration extends to all
parts of the Bible and to every word. While the human writ-
ers chose words that reflected their language, culture, per-
sonality, circumstances, and style, God guided the process so
that each word would accurately convey His message. As a
result, the Bible is infallible, inerrant, and the sole authority
for doctrine and Christian living. The Bible is truth.
The thirty-nine Old Testament books were recognized as
Scripture by the ancient Hebrews, and Jesus and the apostles
quoted from or alluded to almost all of them. The
twenty-seven New Testament books were accepted by
Christians from the earliest times, including contemporaries
of the writers in most cases (II Peter 3:15-16), and are rec-
ognized as Scripture by all Christendom.
Errors can sometimes arise in copying, translating, or
printing the Scriptures, but God has kept His hand upon the
transmission process to preserve His Word for all time (Psalm
100:5). The accuracy of the Old Testament Hebrew text was
safeguarded by the extremely high quality of the scribal trans-
mission process and has received dramatic verification by the
recent discovery of the ancient Dead Sea scrolls. The accuracy
of the New Testament Greek text is assured by the extremely
large number of manuscripts—over 5,000—which cancel out
copyists’ errors.
The King James Version is the most popular English Bible.
It was translated over a seven-year period by forty-seven the-
ologians and linguists. Each was a noted scholar who was
firmly committed to the inspiration and authority of the Scrip-
tures. The New King James Version is a modern language revi-
sion that seeks to preserve accuracy and increase understand-
ability.
Bible students should use the literal method of interpreta-
tion, which means following the natural or usual implication
of an expression—the ordinary and apparent meaning of the
words—rather than seeking a hidden, allegorical or “spiritu-
al” meaning. It is important to use sound logic and to study
words, grammar, background, context, literary genre (style),
history, geography, culture, figures of speech, symbols, para-
bles, and types. When studying the Bible, we should keep in
mind several points: (1) illumination of the Spirit is neces-
sary, (2) the Bible is basically plain and meant to be under-
stood, (3) Scripture interprets Scripture, (4) truth is revealed
progressively from Old to New Testament, (5) the Bible pres-
ents a unified theology, (6) no doctrine stands on one passage
alone or is hidden in obscure passages, (7) the Bible is
accommodated to the human mind (but not to error), and (8)
each passage has one primary meaning but can have many
applications.
We can have confidence that God has revealed, preserved,
and transmitted His Word to us today and that we can under-
stand it. His Word is the Bible.
Humankind
God created man and woman in His spiritual, moral, and
intellectual image (Genesis 1:27). Humans are made of body,
soul, and spirit (I Thessalonians 5:23). The soul and spirit
compose the eternal part of man, including intellect, person-
ality, emotions, will, self-consciousness, intuition, conscience,
and God-consciousness.
Originally, human nature was innocent and sinless, with a
totally free will. Adam and Eve chose to disobey God and
thereby brought sin into the human race. Everyone is now
born with a sinful nature—the compulsion to sin, the domin-
ion of sin (Romans 3:9; 5:12, 19; 7:14). The sinful nature
inevitably leads to sinful acts, resulting in condemnation.
The Bible emphatically declares that all humans are sin-
ners (I Kings 8:46; Proverbs 20:9; Isaiah 64:6). Everyone is
under sin and is guilty before God (Romans 3:9, 19). “There
is none righteous, no, not one” (Romans 3:10). “For all have
sinned and come short of the glory of God” (Romans 3:23).
As a result, humanity is under the sentence of death, physi-
cally and spiritually. “For the wages of sin is death” (Romans
6:23). “Sin, when it is finished, bringeth forth death” (James
1:15). Death means separation, and the ultimate spiritual
death is eternal separation from God.
Everyone needs salvation from sin and its penalty, death.
And God has provided salvation through Jesus Christ.
The Church
The church of Jesus Christ is the body of called-out believ-
ers, those who have been baptized into Christ by water and
Spirit. The Bible describes the church as the body of Christ,
the bride of Christ, and a spiritual temple in which the Spirit
of Christ dwells. The church is both local and universal. Its
mission on earth is to (1) worship and glorify God, (2) evan-
gelize the world, and (3) develop the saints to maturity.
Each believer is his own priest to God (through Jesus) and
can communicate with God directly (Hebrews 4:14-16;
Revelation 1:6). Each member of the church has a position of
service, which includes bearing one another’s burdens and
praying for one another (Galatians 6:1-2; Colossians 4:3, 12).
To train and equip believers for the task of the church, God
has given it special ministers (Ephesians 4:11-16). (1)
Apostle—one sent with a commission. Although no one can
take the place of the twelve apostles of the Lamb, who were
eyewitnesses of Christ, others exercise an apostolic ministry
by serving as pioneer missionaries and leaders (Acts 13:2-4;
14:14). (2) Prophet—one who imparts special messages or
direction from God (Acts 11:27; 15:32; 21:10). (3)
Evangelist—preacher to the unsaved (Acts 21:8; II Timothy
4:5). (4) Pastor (shepherd)—one who leads and takes care of
God’s people, also called bishop (overseer) and elder (Acts
14:23; 20:28; I Timothy 3:1-7; Titus 1:5-9; I Peter 5:1-4). (5)
Teacher—one who instructs in God’s Word (Acts 13:l).
There is also the office of deacon (servant). Deacons
assist spiritual leadership in church activities and business
matters (Acts 6:3; I Timothy 3:8-13).
God has ordained church government, and He gives vari-
ous ministries, roles, tasks, or offices in addition to those just
mentioned (Romans 12:4-8; I Corinthians 12:28). Everyone
should be submissive to spiritual leaders and obey them as
long as they are consistent with Scripture (I Thessalonians
5:12-13; Hebrews 13:17). At the same time, leaders are to be
servants and examples, not dictators (Matthew 20:25-28; I
Peter 5:3).
The church also has gifts of the Spirit, which will remain
until Christ’s return (I Corinthians 1:2, 7; 12:8-10). These
gifts should never be exercised contrary to the Bible or godly
leadership, but always with love, in order, and for edification
of the body. The spiritual gifts are miraculous and supernatu-
ral. They can be classified as follows.
Gifts of revelation. (1) Word of wisdom—divine guid-
ance, direction, or insight for a specific situation (Acts
27:9-11). (2) Word of knowledge—divine revelation of a fact
otherwise unknown to the recipient (Acts 5:1-11). (3)
Discerning of spirits—perceiving whether something is
motivated by God, an evil spirit, or the human spirit (Acts
16:16-18).
Gifts of power. (4) Faith—a special endowment of trust in
God for a particular crisis or a seemingly hopeless situation
(Acts 27:21-25). (5) Gifts of healing—divine healings, either
instantaneous or progressive, for various types of physical and
mental diseases (Acts 5:12-16). Christ purchased healing for
the body (Isaiah 53:5; Matthew 8:16-17) and gave believers
authority to lay hands on the sick for their recovery (Mark
16:17-18). The elders are to anoint the sick with oil and pray
for healing in Jesus’ name (James 5:13-16). (6) Working of
miracles—direct intervention by God in a situation,
transcending natural laws (Acts 20:7-12; 28:1-6).
Gifts of utterance. (7) Prophecy—a message from God in
the known language (I Corinthians 14:3-4, 29-33). In a more
general sense, every anointed testimony, preaching, or praise
can be called prophecy (Revelation 19:10). (8) Kinds of
tongues—a message from God in a language not known to
the audience, to be interpreted for the benefit of the church (I
Corinthians 14:5, 27-28). Each believer may also speak in
tongues without interpretation for personal devotion and ben-
efit (I Corinthians 14:4, 14-15, 18, 28). (9) Interpretation of
tongues—giving the meaning of a public message in tongues
(I Corinthians 14:5, 27-28).
Jesus Christ instituted the Lord’s Supper and footwashing in
His church, commanding observance of both (Luke 22:14-20;
John 13:2-17;
I Corinthians 10:16-17; 11:23-34). The Lord’s Supper consists
of eating unleavened bread and drinking the fruit of the vine,
which symbolize Christ’s broken body and shed blood. The
church is to partake with reverence, self-examination, and
repentance, solemnly remembering the Lord’s atoning death
and joyously anticipating His return. The saints thereby enjoy
communion with Him and fellowship with one another.
Footwashing teaches humility, service, and fellowship.
The local church should meet regularly and often. It is not
required to observe Sabbath laws, for the church is not bound
by the ceremonial law (Acts 15:19-29; Romans 14:5-6;
Galatians 4:9-11; Colossians 2:16-17). Christians enjoy spiri-
tual sanctification and rest every day in the Holy Spirit.
Setting aside a weekly day of rest and designating times for
group worship, fellowship, and instruction are still valid prin-
ciples, however. The early church met on Sunday in com-
memoration of the Lord’s resurrection (Acts 20:7; I
Corinthians 16:2). Every Christian should be faithful to the
meetings of his local church (Acts 2:42; Hebrews 10:25).