
The Divine Inspiration of the Bible
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Narrated by:
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Ralph Cosham
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By:
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Arthur W. Pink
"Deny that the Bible is, without any qualifications, the very word of God, and you are left without any ultimate standard of measurement and without any supreme authority." (from the book)
The Bible is the foundation of Christianity. In The Divine Inspiration of the Bible, Arthur Pink sets out to defend the belief that this holy book is, in fact, the true word of God. In doing so he examines the idea of divine inspiration and presents various arguments that aim to prove God Almighty is the author of the Bible.
This book not only examines evidence for the trustworthiness of scripture and what belief in inspiration means but also helps Christians achieve a firmer understanding of the Bible's authority.
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GREATEST BOOK ON THE GREATEST EVER BOOK!
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Powerful!!!!
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WOW!!!! AMAZING INSIGHT!!!
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stand in amazement that we have the scriptures
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Excellent work!!!
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Wonderful
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Serendipitous
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Divine Inspiration
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This remains the truth today, and more so. We have the internet, and, the ability to obtain a FREE copy of Scripture. The historical account of the Irishman, an impoverished laborer, who was willing to buy paper and ink, and use his evenings to copy out the Bible owned by a wealthier man (the only copy in the town) is an outright testimony which should cause me great shame. This comes in chapter 9, near the end of the book. It's worth reading all of it to get to that point.
President T.W. Wilson was in office and is mentioned in this book. Better still is the use of Scripture to back and substantiate the points carefully made. What bits of then-modern references are used, it is in passing, and that makes this a useful work for serious study. Never does the author use historical accounts to prove the point, but to verify secular acknowledgement.
The narrator has a pleasant voice, and a suitable reading is made. He does follow the silly modern convention of saying "One Chronicles..." and such, rather than "First Timothy 3 and verse 16." But this doesn't alter the text. It's just a little irksome, but I am fussy. My opinion is, if you're going to read aloud a sermon, speak exactly as the author would have. when he originally presented the message.
Still Accurate Today; Eliminates modern garbage
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magnificent
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