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Part
IV.
The Bible—We Know It Is True!
Gathering Evidence
Tod Kennedy, 1992, Revised 2004
Outline
of The Bible: We Know It Is True Bible Study
I. Seven
Reasons—Why do we know that the Bible is true?
II. The
Canon—Why do we know that the right books make up the Bible?
III. Evidence—What do we know that supports the accuracy of the Bible?
IV. Gathering Evidence: Three General
Kinds of Evidence
V. Conclusion
— How does the evidence for the Bible affect our faith?
Part IV. Gathering Evidence
—
Three General Kinds of Evidence
Introduction
- There are three general kinds of evidence that people use to determine
the truth:
- Oral evidence.
- Written evidence such as a letter, a piece of potter with writing or
a picture.
- Other kinds of evidence such as a gun, a finger
-print,
blood, the presence or absence of body, a photograph, a chariot wheel,
the walls of a city, a grave, a buried city, and similar evidences that
one may produce.
With the Bible we are primarily concerned with written evidence and
archaeological evidence. We have no oral witnesses, since the events and
writing occurred centuries ago.
- There are also two primary methods for gathering and examining
evidence:
- The scientific method.
- The legal-historical
method.
- With the Bible, as with most of what the world accepts as true, the
legal
-historical
method is the method of choice. Most of the biblical events cannot be
reproduced because of the distance in time, lack of technology and
recording, and the miraculous nature of the events. Furthermore, mankind
was not present when God created the heavens and the earth.
The Scientific Method
- The job of science is to find facts, make a theory about what the
facts mean, and then through repeated testing of the theory reach an
accurate interpretation of the facts. The same conclusion must be reached
each time the experiment is conducted. This line of proof is the one most
people think they depend upon. It is very limited. The scientific method
is based upon repeating the event in the presence of the person
questioning.
- In the scientific method you observe, collect data, make an
hypothesis, and test and demonstrate the hypothesis by experiment.
- The successful application of the scientific method should result in
the same results each time the same experiment is run.
- The steps in the scientific method:
- One observes something and the observation brings up a question or
problem.
- State the problem and gather facts that bear on the problem.
- Form an hypothesis or an estimate that might explain the problem.
This hypothesis must fit the data and be stated in a form that can be
tested. Continue to gather data that might explain the problem.
- Experiment to test the hypothesis. Here you observe, measure,
predict, and experiment again.
- Organize and record the data and the results of the observation,
hypothesis, and experimentation.
- Draw conclusions. Very often the conclusion are based upon
philosophical or ideological beliefs, not upon the scientific method. In
science, though it claims to be objective, the scientists often guide
themselves by their agenda.
- Verify the conclusion or truthfulness of the hypothesis by repeated
experimentation. If the hypothesis and conclusions are correct, the
experiment ought to give the same results each time.
- Summary:
- Observe
- Question
- Gather facts
- Hypothesize
- Gather facts
- Experiment
- Organize and Record
- Conclusions
- Verify conclusions by repeating the experiment
The legal-historical
method
- The legal
-historical
method demands that one show beyond a reasonable doubt that something is
true based upon the evidence. Much of what we believe to be true is based
upon this type of proof.
This method is used to prove if George Washington lived; was Robert
Lee the commander of the Army of Virginia; who won the first Super Bowl;
did Jesus live; do you have a job; and for the demonstration of most
knowledge of people, places, and events.
As with the scientific method, the legal-historical
method requires a certain procedure.
- You observe, collect, and question evidence.
- There are three types of evidence that are admitted: oral, written,
and exhibits (a gun, a bullet, a notebook, a jar, a manuscript, a
drawing).
- This method depends upon the reliability of the evidence. For
example, to prove that you were in church: people saw you; you have the
notes and bulletin; or the pastor remembers seeing you.
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