Once Scripture is viewed as partially mistaken, every difficult passage becomes negotiable. Authority shifts from God’s Word to the reader’s judgment. This does not produce freedom. It produces confusion. Without a trustworthy Word, the church is left to drift, reshaping its beliefs according to cultural pressure or internal preference.
If Scripture is God’s Word, then it must be true. The doctrine of inerrancy is not an added layer of theological rigidity. It is the necessary implication of divine inspiration. A God who cannot lie does not produce a Word that deceives.
Inerrancy affirms that Scripture, in its original writings, does not err in anything it affirms. This does not eliminate the need for careful interpretation. It does not flatten genre or deny the use of metaphor, poetry, or historical narrative. It does affirm that when Scripture speaks, it speaks truthfully.
Jesus Himself affirms this when He prays, “Your word is truth” (John 17:17). Scripture does not merely contain true statements. It is true because it comes from God. Once error is introduced, authority is undermined. A Bible that can be wrong must be corrected by something higher.
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