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Bible Study

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Is the Bible outdated and irrelevant?

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No
80% 976 votes Total: 1222 votes
Yes
20% 246 votes
No

It is a statement on the changes in the character of America as a whole that anyone would even ask if the Bible is outdated and irrelevant. Twenty years ago, even those who did not ascribe to the Bible and Christian teachings, still accepted the Bible as a relevant, read-worthy, book. They respected it, even if they didn't live it.

About 10 years ago, while attending college and later doing a stint as a substitute teacher in a high school, I began to hear more and more people make statements about the Bible as a "good book", but not relevant or the Word of God. Not only did people dismiss the Bible as irrelevant, except as a history book, they also displayed great ignorance about what was actually in the Bible.

This swift slide from respect to dismissal has continued to roll down the slippery slope of ignoring God's Word or relegating it to a back shelf as one of many other good books. Parallel to this slide in people's view of the Bible, we continue to see a slide in the morals and ethics of all. In relegating the Bible to a place if dishonor, society has removed any moral mandate for it's behavior.

Because of this moral decline, the Bible is more relevant than ever. It needs to take it's place back in the hearts, the heads, and the respect of society. Even when a person does not accept Christianity, the Bible, as a tool for moral living, deserves a place of honor. For those who love it, read it and base their entire life upon it, Relevance isn't even a question. The Bible tells us the Word of God will not return void, and it has relevance and a place for everyone, regardless of the era of his or her birth.

In Amos 8:11-14, it says, "Behold, the days come, saith the Lord God, that I will send a famine in the land, not a famine of bread, not a thirst for water, but of hearing the words of the Lord.." This scripture predicts a day, such as today, when people will experience a famine of the Word of God. Our lack of honor for the Bible has created a society experiencing a famine. They may not understand what it is they seek, but disregarding the Word of God, the Bible, leads to a starvation of the soul.

Many in today's society go farther than disregarding the Bible, they despise it. They seek through the courts and other methods to eliminate it from any public arena, including the school. Not content with dismissing the Bible from their own life, they want to eliminate every trace of scripture so they never have to see it and experience the knowing that comes with it. That knowing is a soul-deep longing that realizes the power of the Word of God.

The Bible has something to say about those who despise the Bible. In Proverbs 13:13, it tells us that "Whoso despiseth the word shall be destroyed; but he that feareth the commandment shall be rewarded." The Bible is not merely a good book, it is the very Word of God, and God does not take it lightly when His word is under attack as it is today. The timelessness of the Bible keeps it up-to-date and relevant to all who will seek it's wisdom.

God tells us in His Word that "The grass withered, the flower fadeth: but the word of our God shall stand for ever." (Isaiah 40:8) "Heaven and earth shall pass away; but my words shall not pass away." (Mark 13:31 and Luke 21:33) The Bible will stand forever as a timeless work, the words of God to a people who listen.

The Word of God, the Bible, still, and forever will, retain the power that only the Words of God could have. It is "sharper than a two-edged sword;" it is "pure as silver tried in the furnace of earth;" it is "perfect"; it is "right"; it is "truth", and so very much more. The Bible has the answer to everything we need, what could be more relevant than that?

Learn more about this author, Angela S. Young.
Contact this writer Click here to send this author comments or questions.

Yes

History is written by men. And men tell lies.

Now this might seem like the least surprising announcement since the chairman of a fast food chain came out and said we're starting to think that cheeseburgers make you fat', but it is nonetheless a point to remember when tackling an issue such as this.

To understand the Bible, is to understand its place in the context of history. This weighty tome was not written in a time such as ours, where millions of people have the right to education and at the very least, grasp a basic understanding of the fundamentals of science, language and the world around them. This was a savage time, where the peoples of each developing nation feared all that was around them in the absence of any true knowledge; the glowing eyes in the sky at night and the great orange sphere with its tortuous heat throughout the day. These people were looking for an explanation, and for those with intellect enough to offer one, there was an opportunity for great power.

Two thousand years ago, the learned few wielded a power the empires of Greece, Rome and later Britain knew how to exploit only too well the power of the pen. With no one to challenge them on any level, the authors behind the scriptures, which eventually combined to become the book we know today, set about explaining the universe's every mystery, from creation to death and back again. Finally the primitive masses could understand their existence; what to fear and what to respect. Those with parchment in hand would stand atop the hills and boom messages across the valleys, a broad smile widening still further as groups of people swelled before them, anxious to heed the word of God. But these messengers were not spreading peace and harmony. They were creating armies.

In the hundreds of years that followed, each new generation spawned a new religious ideal, and one that would be upheld at all costs. However mild and meek the original intentions were, the Bible was reinterpreted to suit the demands of the hierarchy and maintain control of the people who would die fighting to appease their' God. From the Crusades through to modern-day Israel, the conflict continues to establish one belief as the superior doctrine.

Time and again, history highlights the damage religion has caused as each new figurehead looks to abuse its authority. At a time some 150 years before the musings of Marco Polo in the thirteenth century, the world witnessed the birth of one particular stand-out example. In the Middle East a man named Al Hassan had devised a cruel and lethal plot to aid in his battle against the infidel foreign invaders and we were introduced to assassins for the first time (literally translated as follower of Al Hassan'). This man would pick young boys that he thought would grow into useful warriors and take them to a deserted residence, whereupon they would be drugged until unconscious. On waking up, comfortably numb in a drug-induced haze, the boy would find that he was surrounded by plentiful food, gold and beautiful women. But no sooner had he taken this all in when he was drugged again and woke to find those splendors gone as if they had never been there. It was then that Al Hassan would claim that he had taken the boy to Paradise, and that if he did his bidding in battle and died for the cause, he would be taken back there again for all eternity. This truly was a turn of extraordinary, ruthless cunning, and when one stops to consider the mentality of a suicide bomber, who would bet against the same technique still being employed today?

But even if we completely disregard the hateful conflicts of past and present, the Bible's outdated, fantastical stories remain too abstract or absurd to the point of plain childish, to be considered relevant in any twenty-first century life. Surely no one in a modern audience, with the best will in the world and general knowledge as their companion, could be expected to comprehend the feats of Moses or Noah as genuine historical events? There are those who will tell you that these stories were never meant to be actual accounts of fact, but tales that echo with a different relevance in each generation, designed as a sort of moral code by way of analogy. But if that really was the intention, why have so many people fought and died for nothing more than a fictitious, flowery sentiment?

Ironically , one of the bigger dents in the Bible's credibility is a great deal older than any scribe who worked on the project. It certainly must have been construed as something of a bummer in the halls of all things God-like when palaeontologists unearthed the first dinosaur bone, a species conspicuous by its absence in Genesis and beyond.

Has not the time come to finally credit the human race with enough intelligence to acknowledge the Bible for what it is: an interesting read if somewhat lengthy for some tastes which fully deserves its place in history as a monumental achievement, but one that should have no more right to govern one's life than a copy of Cosmopolitan?

Learn more about this author, Adam Brett.
Contact this writer Click here to send this author comments or questions.

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