Essentials
3 Things We Must Believe About God's Word adapted from Taking God At His Word: Why the Bible Is Knowable, Necessary, and Enough, and What That Means for You and Me by Kevin DeYoung.
Essentials
In Psalm 119 we see at least three essential, irreducible characteristics we should believe about God’s word.
1. God’s word says what is true.
Like the psalmist, we can trust in the word (v. 42), knowing that it
is altogether true (v. 142). We can’t trust everything we read on the
Internet. We can’t trust everything we hear from our professors. We
certainly can’t trust all the facts given by our politicians. We can’t
even trust the fact-checkers who check those facts! Statistics can be
manipulated. Photographs can be faked. Magazine covers can be
airbrushed. Our teachers, our friends, our science, our studies, even
our eyes can deceive us. But the word of God is entirely true and always
true:
God’s word is firmly fixed in the heavens (v. 89); it doesn’t change.
There is no limit to its perfection (v. 96); it contains nothing
corrupt. All God’s righteous rules endure forever (v. 160); they never
get old and never wear out.
If you ever think to yourself, “I need to know what is true— what is
true about me, true about people, true about the world, true about the
future, true about the past, true about the good life, and true about
God,” then come to God’s word. It teaches only what is true: “Sanctify
them in the truth,” Jesus said; “your word is truth” (John 17:17).
2. God’s word demands what is right.
The psalmist gladly acknowledges God’s right to issue commands and
humbly accepts that all these commands are right. “I know, O Lord, that
your rules are righteous,” he says (Ps. 119:75). All God’s commandments
are sure (v. 86). All his precepts are right (v. 128). I sometimes hear
Christians admit that they don’t like what the Bible says, but since
it’s the Bible they have to obey it. On one level, this is an admirable
example of submitting oneself to the word of God. And yet, we should go
one step further and learn to see the goodness and rightness in all that
God commands. We should love what God loves and delight in whatever he
says. God does not lay down arbitrary rules. He does not give orders so
that we might be restricted and miserable. He never requires what is
impure, unloving, or unwise. His demands are always noble, always just,
and always righteous.
3. God’s word provides what is good.
According to Psalm 119, the word of God is the way of happiness (vv.
1–2), the way to avoid shame (v. 6), the way of safety (v. 9), and the
way of good counsel (v. 24). The word gives us strength (v. 28) and hope
(v. 43). It provides wisdom (vv. 98–100, 130) and shows us the way we
should go (v. 105). God’s verbal revelation, whether in spoken form in
redemptive history or in the covenantal documents of redemptive history
(i.e., the Bible), is unfailingly perfect. As the people of God, we
believe the word of God can be trusted in every way to speak what is
true, command what is right, and provide us with what is good.
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