Reason
&
Revelation, April 2003, 23[4]:25-31
CopyrightA9 2003 Apologetics
Press, Inc., All
Rights Reserved
THE MYTH OFFACTUAL BIBLE
CONTRADICTIONS
Eric Lyons, M.Min.
His preacher described the young man as asolid
Christian. He was a devout follower of Christ who
was
enthusiastic about living for Jesus. From the time he
was a
young boy, his grandmother had taken him to worship
God on the
first day of every week. After becoming a Christian,
he had,
according to his preacher,attended every service
of the
church. He grew in the faith, and began taking part
in
leading the congregation in prayer. Later, he
personally
taught the congregation by occasionally standing
before the
church and reading the Bible to them aloud, at times
even
delivering short talks. Before departing for the
university
(about an hour away from his hometown), the young
18-year-old
from West Virginia was considered by those who knew
him best
as a dedicated Christian with impressive
potential one whose
shield of faith would stand strong when worldliness
attacked,
and whose foundation would remain firm when shaken by
the
devils doctrines.
Sadly, only a short time passed before this young
man lost
his faith. He went to college as a believer in the God
of the
Bible, and came home anenlightened skeptic. One
of the
first classes he took at the university was an
elective course
on world religions. Initially, he thought he could
handle
whatever questions came his way about Christianity. He
had
memorized numerous verses in the Bible. He knew all
about the
uniqueness of the church. He even could tell people
what to do
in order to have their sins forgiven. It took,
however, little
time for one teacher in one class in
one
university to turn thissolid Christian into an
unbeliever.
What led to the demise of this young mans belief
in God,
and the Bible as His Word? Why did this young
Christians
faith crumble so easily? It all began with his
inability to
handle thefactual discrepancies that his newly
found
friends had convinced him were in the Bible. When
asked to
explain to his teacher and fellow classmates how
hundreds of
Bible contradictions are not contradictions at
all, but
simply misunderstandings on mans part, he would
not...because he could not. After being
bombarded with
hundreds of questions that he was incapable of
answering,
eventually he began denying the truths he once
believed. Not
long after this young manstransformation, he
gave one of
his childhood mentors (the preacher of the church
where he was
reared) a document titledFactual Discrepancies.
That
document (of which I have a copy) contains nearly
seventy
allegedfactual contradictions that supposedly
are found
within the Bible. Because this frustrated young man
from West
Virginia (who had been taught the Bible his whole
life) was
unable to answer these allegations, he gave up on the
God of
the Bible. His faith in the inerrant, inspired Word of
God was
replaced with the vacuousness of a skeptics
uncertainty all
because he was unable to defend the Truth against the
vicious,
frequent attacks leveled against it by infidelity.
I wonder how many times this true story could be
rehearsed
by mothers and fathers all over the world? How many
grandmothers (like the one mentioned above) have seen
their
work (cf. 1 Corinthians 3:12-15) destroyed at
the hands of
infidels? How many young college students leave home
as
solid Christians, and return four years later as
enlightened skeptics?
This issue of Reason & Revelation is
dedicated
to answering six of the list of seventy alleged
factual
Bible contradictions the young West Virginian was
presented at
the university. It is my hope that you will see how
easily
these allegations can be answered logically and
truthfully.
[The numbers of eachcontradiction match those
on the list
given to the young man. Our responses to most of the
others
can be found on theAlleged
Discrepancies94 section of the Apologetics Press
Web site.]
FACTUAL CONTRADICTION #2
Animals or Man Created First?
After reading the first two chapters of the Bible,
some
skeptics, in an attempt to disprove the Bibles
inerrancy,
have accused the writer of Genesis of erring in regard
to the
record of events occurring on day six of creation.
While
Genesis 1:24-27 plainly indicates that man was created
after the animals, critics claim that Genesis
2:18-19
teaches that man was created before animals.
Skeptics
assert that such language by the author of Genesis
proves that
the Bible is not divinely inspired.
Some Bible students resolve this alleged
contradiction by
explaining that the Hebrew verb translated
formed could have
been translatedhad formed. In his Exposition
of
Genesis, H.C. Leupold wrote:
Without any emphasis on the sequence of
acts,
the account here records the making of the various
creatures
and the bringing of them to man. That in reality
they had
been made prior to the creation of man is so
entirely
apparent from chapter one as not to require
explanation. But
the reminder that God hadmolded them makes
obvious His
power to bring them to man and so is quite
appropriately
mentioned here. It would not, in our estimation,
be wrong
to translate yatsar as a pluperfect in this
instance:
He had molded. The insistence of the
critics upon a
plain past is partly the result of the attempt to
make
chapters one and two clash at as many points as
possible
(1942, p. 130, emp. added).
Hebrew scholar Victor Hamilton agreed with
Leupolds
assessment of Genesis 2:19, as he also recognized that
it is
possible to translate formed as91had
formed (1990, p.
176). Keil and Delitzsch stated in the first volume of
their
Old Testament commentary thatour modern style for
expressing
the same thought [which the Holy Spirit via Moses
intended to
communicate EL] would be
simply this:
91God brought to Adam the beasts which He had
formed (1996, emp. added). Adding even
more credence
to this interpretation is the fact that the New
International
Version renders the verb in verse 19, not as simple
past
tense, but rather as a pluperfect:Now the Lord God
had
formed out of the ground all the beasts of the
field and
all the birds of the air (emp. added). Although
Genesis
chapters 1 and 2 agree even when yatsar is
translated
simplyformed, it is important to note that the
four Hebrew
scholars mentioned above, and the translators of the
NIV, all believe that it could
(or
should) be renderedhad formed. And, as Leupold
acknowledged, those who deny this possibility do so
(at least
partly) because of their insistence on making the two
chapters
disagree.
The main reason that skeptics do not see harmony in
the
events recorded in the first two chapters of the Bible
(especially regarding the order of Gods
creation whether
vegetation, birds, land animals, man, etc.) is because
they
fail to realize the fact that Genesis 1 and 2 serve
different purposes. Chapter one (including 2:1-4)
focuses
on the order of the creation events; chapter
two
(actually 2:5-25) simply provides more detailed
information
about some of the events mentioned in chapter one.
Chapter two
never was meant to be a regurgitation of chapter one,
but
instead serves its own unique purpose to develop in
detail the
more important features of the creation account,
especially
the creation of man and his surroundings. As Kenneth
Kitchen
noted in his book, Ancient Orient and Old
Testament:
Genesis 1 mentions the creation of man as
the
last of a series, and without any details, whereas
in
Genesis 2 man is the center of interest and more
specific
details are given about him and his setting. Failure
to
recognize the complementary nature of the
subject-distinction between a skeleton outline of
all
creation on the one hand, and the concentration in
detail on
man and his immediate environment on the other,
borders on
obscurantism (1966, p. 117).
Norman Geisler and Thomas Howe summarized some of
the
differences in Genesis 1-2 in the following chart
(1992, p.
35).
Genesis
1 |
Genesis
2 |
Chronological
order |
Topical
order |
Outline |
Details |
Creating
animals |
Naming
animals |
The fact is,
Genesis 2 does not present a creation
account at
all but presupposes the completion of Gods work
of creation
as set forth in chapter 1.... Chapter 2 is built on
the
foundation of chapter 1 and represents no different
tradition than the first chapter or discrepant
account of
the order of creation (Archer, 1982, pp. 68-69).
In short, Genesis chapters 1 and 2 are harmonious
in every
way. What may seem as a contradiction at first glance
is
essentially a more detailed account. The text of
Genesis 2:19
says nothing about the relative origins of man and
beast in
terms of chronology, but merely suggests that the
animals were
formed before being brought to man in order to be
named.
If one still rejects both the
possibility
of yatsar being translatedhad formed,
and the
explanation of the two chapters being worded
differently
because of the purposes they serve, a final response
to the
skeptics allegations is that the text never says
that there
were no animals created on the sixth day of creation
after Adam. Although in my judgment it is
very
unlikely that God created a special group of
animals to be
named by Adam (after creating all others before the
creation
of man Genesis 1:20-27), some commentators do hold
this view.
After his comments concerning the translation of
yatsar, Victor Hamilton indicated that the
creatures
mentioned in 2:19 referto the creation of a
special
group of animals brought before Adam for naming
(1990, p.
176, emp. added). Hamilton believes that most all the
animals
on the Earth were created before Adam; however, those
mentioned in 2:19 were created on day six after Adam,
for the
purpose of being named. In U. Cassutos comments on
Genesis 2
regarding the time Adam named the animals, he stated:
Of all
the species of beasts and flying creatures that had
been
created and had spread over the face of the earth and
the
firmament of the heavens, the Lord God now
formed
particular specimens for the purpose of presenting
them all
before man in the midst of the Garden (1961, p.
129, emp.
added). Both of these long-time Bible students
recognize that
the text never says there were no animals created
after Adam,
but that all animals were created either on day five
or day
six (before and possibly even after Adams
creation). However
unorthodox (or unlikely) this particular position
might be, it
does serve as another reason why skeptics have no
foundation
upon which to stand when they assert that a
contradiction
exists between Genesis 1:24-27 and 2:19.
FACTUAL CONTRADICTION #7
A Slip of the Mind?
In 1 Corinthians 10:7-10, the apostle Paul gave
four
examples of how Gods chosen people in the Old
Testament had
sinned by lustingafter evil things. At one time
or another,
the Israelites had been guilty of worshipping false
gods (v.
7), committing sexual immorality (v. 8), as well as
tempting
God and complaining against the Almighty (vss. 9-10).
It is
the second example Paul gives in this list (involving
the
Israelites sexual immorality) that has been the
brunt of much
criticism. Allegedly, this verse is in direct
opposition with
what Moses recorded in the Pentateuch. Whereas Paul
stated,
[I]n one day twenty-three thousand
[Israelites EL] fell as a result of their
sexual
immorality (1 Corinthians 10:8), Moses recorded that
those
who died in the plague were twenty-four thousand
(Numbers
25:9).
Some apologists (Archer, 1982, p. 401; Geisler and
Howe,
1992, pp. 458-459) have attempted to resolve this
infamous
case ofthe missing thousand by claiming that
the Old
Testament event to which Paul alluded was the plague
Jehovah
sent upon the people after they made a golden calf
(Exodus
32:35), and not the plague recorded in Numbers 25:9.
The
problem with this explanation is that Exodus 32
focuses on
idolatry, not sexual immorality. Although idolatry
sometimes
included sexual immorality, most likely Paul was not
referring
to the events that took place after Moses descent
from Mount
Sinai (Exodus 32).
So how can we explain Pauls statement in light
of the
information given in Numbers 25:9 (the probable
sister
passage to 1 Corinthians 10:8)? The answer lies in the
fact
that Paul stated that 23,000 fellin one
day, while
in Numbers 25 Moses wrote that the total number
of
those who died in the plague was 24,000. Moses never
indicated
how long it took for the 24,000 to die, but only
stated that
this was the numberwho died in the plague.
Thus, the record
in 1 Corinthians simply supplies us with more
knowledge about
what occurred in Numbers 25 23,000 of the 24,000 who
died in
the plague diedin one day.
It is troubling to see how certain other apologists
attempt
to explain this alleged contradiction. In their
popular book,
Hard Sayings of the Bible, Walter Kaiser, Peter
Davids,
Manfred Brauch, and F.F. Bruce made the following
comments
regardingthe missing thousand in 1 Corinthians
10:8:
It is possible that Paul, citing the Old
Testament from memory as he wrote to the
Corinthians,
referred to the incident in Numbers 25:9, but his
mind
slipped a chapter later in picking up the
number.... We
cannot rule out the possibility that there was some
reference to 23 or 23,000 in his local environment
as he was
writing and that caused a slip in his mind.
Paul was not attempting to instruct people
on
Old Testament history and certainly not on the
details of
Old Testament history.
Thus here we have a case in which Paul
apparently makes a slip of the mind for some
reason
(unless he has special revelation he does not inform
us
about), but the mental error does not affect the
teaching.
How often have we heard preachers with written
Bibles before
them make similar errors of details that in no way
affected
their message? If we notice it (and few usually do),
we
(hopefully) simply smile and focus on the real point
being
made. As noted above, Paul probably did not have a
written
Bible to check (although at times he apparently had
access
to scrolls of the Old Testament), but in the full
swing of
dictation he cited an example from memory and got
a
detail wrong (pp. 598-599, parenthetical
comments in
orig., emp. added).
Supposedly, Paul just made a mistake. He messed up,
just
like when a preacher today mistakenly misquotes a
passage of
Scripture. According to the repetitious testimony of
these
men, Paul merely hada slip of the mind (thereby
experiencing what some today might call asenior
moment),
and our reaction (as well as the skeptics) should
be to
simply smile and focus on the real point being
made.
Unbelievable! These men pen an 800-page book in an
attempt
to answer numerous alleged Bible contradictions and to
defend
the integrity of the Bible, and they have the audacity
to say
that the apostle Paulcited an example from memory
and got a
detail wrong. Why in the world did they spend so
much time
(and space) answering various questions that skeptics
frequently raise, and then conclude that the man who
penned
almost half of the New Testament books made mistakes
in his
writings?! They have concluded exactly what the
infidels
teach Bible writers made mistakes. Furthermore, if
Paul made
one mistake in his writings, he easily could have
blundered
elsewhere. And if Paul made mistakes in other
writings, how
can we say that Peter, John, Isaiah, and others did
notslip
up occasionally? The fact is, if Paul, or any of
these men,
made mistakes in their writings, then they were not
inspired
by God (cf. 2 Timothy 3:16-17; 2 Peter 1:20-21),
because God
does not make mistakes (cf. Titus 1:2; Psalm 139:1-6).
And if
the Scriptures were notgiven by inspiration of
God, then
the Bible is not from God. And if the Bible is not
from God,
then the skeptic is right. But as we noted above, the
skeptic
is not right! First Corinthians 10:8 can be explained
logically without assuming Pauls writings are
inaccurate.
Sadly, Kaiser, et al., totally dismiss the numerous
places
where Paul claims his writings are from God. When Paul
wrote
to the churches of Galatia, he told them that his
teachings
came to himthrough revelation of Jesus Christ
(1:12). in
his first letter to the Thessalonian Christians, he
claimed
the words he wrote wereby the word of the Lord
(4:15). To
the church at Ephesus, Paul wrote that Gods message
was
revealed by the Spirit to His holy apostles and
prophets
(3:5). In 2 Peter 3:16, Peter put Pauls letters on
a par with
the Old Testament Scriptures when he compared them to
the
rest of the Scriptures. And in the same epistle
where Kaiser,
et al., claim that Paulmade a slip of the mind,
Paul said,
the things which I write to you are the
commandments of the
Lord (1 Corinthians 14:37).
Paul did notinvent facts about Old Testament
stories.
Neither did he have to rely on his own cognizance to
remember
particular numbers or names. The Holy Spirit revealed
the
Truth to him all of it (cf. John 14:26; John
16:13).
Just like the writers of the Old Testament, Paul was
fully
inspired by the Holy Spirit (cf. 2 Samuel 23:2; Acts
1:16; 2
Peter 1:20-21; 3:15-16; 2 Timothy 3:16-17).
FACTUAL CONTRADICTION #14
A Coin Called9aric
Before Solomon began building theholy house
of God, his
father David challenged the Israelites to consecrate
themselves by bringing an offering to the Lord that
would be
used in the Temples construction (1 Chronicles
29:3-5). The
text indicates thatthe leaders of the fathers
houses,
leaders of the tribes of Israel, the captains of
thousands and
of hundreds, with the officers over the kings work,
offered
willingly (29:6). They gave 5,000 talents of gold,
10,000
talents of silver, 18,000 talents of bronze, and
100,000
talents of iron. First Chronicles 29:7 also indicates
that
these Israelites gave 10,000 darics of gold.
The use of currency known as darics in a narrative
that
predated the invention of the currency by 500 years
has led
some to believe the author of Chronicles lacked divine
guidance. These critics correctly assert that the
daric was a
coin of the Persian Empire (probably derived from
Darius the
Mede). Furthermore, it is true that even though
the
chronicler used the daric to evaluate a Temple
offering that
took place around 970 B.C., this coinage was unknown
to David
(Wycliffe, 1962). It was not minted before 515
B.C. (Dillard and Longman, 1994, p.
171), and
probably was not known in Palestine until the fifth
century
B.C. (when the book of
Chronicles likely
was written). So why does this not invalidate
the
inerrancy of the Scriptures? After all, a narrative
that has
things (like money) in it that obviously did not exist
when
the narrative took place is nothing but a fairy tale,
right?
Actually, the use of the term9aric by the
writer of
Chronicles in the fifth century B.C. does
not mean that he believed (or wanted his readers to
believe)
that the Israelites in Davids time possessed
darics. The
chronicler merely expressed in language that would
be
intelligible to his readers the sum of the gold
donated by the
Israelites, without intending to assume that there
were darics
in use in the time of David (Keil and Delitzsch,
1996). He
simply used a term that was popular in his own day to
help his
readers better understand the sacrifice of those who
gave the
gold (cf. Ezra 2:69; 8:27; Nehemiah 7:70-72).
|
Darics
courtesy of
ancient-coin-forum.com |
The chronicler used a figure of speech known as
prolepsis
(the assignment of something, such as an event or
name, to a
time that precedes it). People often use prolepsis for
the
sake of convenience, or so that the reader or audience
can
better understand what is being communicated. For
example, I
might say,My wife and I dated two years before we
got
married, when actually she was not my wife when we
were
dating, but a very dear friend. We may see a special
on
television about when President Ronald Reagan was a
boy, but
the fact is, Ronald Reagan was not president of the
United
States when he was a boy. From time to time, even the
Bible
uses this kind of accommodative language. In John 11,
the
Bible speaks of a woman named Mary whoanointed the
Lord with
ointment (11:1-2), yet this anointing actually did
not occur
for about three months. John merely spoke about it as
having
already happened because when he wrote his gospel
account,
this event generally was known. Another example of
prolepsis
is found in Genesis 13:3 where we read that Abraham
went on
his journey from the South as far as Bethel. This
area
actually did not wear the name Bethel until years
later when
Jacob gave it that name (Genesis 28:19). However, when
Moses
wrote of this name hundreds of years later, he was
free to use
it even when writing about a time before the name
actually was
given. Likewise, the chronicler used accommodative
language
when explaining the free-will offerings given to help
in
constructing the Temple of God.
Admittedly, the writer of Chronicles used measures
of his
period familiar to modern readers even when writing
about
events that took place 500 years beforehand. However,
converting measures does not destroy the inerrancy of
Scripture!
FACTUAL CONTRADICTION #21
Motives Matter
In roughly 841 B.C., the
commander of
Israels army, Jehu the son of Jehoshaphat, was
anointed king
over the northern kingdom and was commanded by the
Lord to
strike down the house of Ahab andcut off
from Ahab all the
males in Israel, both bond and free (2 Kings
9:6-10). After
receiving this command from the Lord via one ofthe
sons of
the prophets, Jehu began his assassination of
Ahabs family.
He started by slaying Ahabs son, Joram (also known
as
Jehoram), who was ruling Israel at the time Jehu was
anointed
king. He then proceeded to kill Ahaziah (the king of
Judah and
grandson of Jezebel 9:27-29) and forty-two of
Ahaziahs
brothers (10:12-14). Later, he slew (or had others
slay)
Jezebel (the mother of Joram and former wife of the
deceased
Ahab 9:30-37), all seventy sons of Ahab who were
living in
Samaria andall who remained to Ahab in Samaria
(10:1-10,17), andall who remained of the house of
Ahab in
Jezreel, includingall his great men and his
close
acquaintances, and his priests (10:11). Jehus
final stop was
at the temple of Baal where, upon gathering all the
Baal-worshipping leaders of Israel into the temple, he
locked
them up and had them massacred (10:18-27).
After Jehu had carried out his orders to obliterate
all
males from the house of Ahab, the Lord said to him:
Because you have done well in doing what
is
right in My sight, and have done to the house of
Ahab all
that was in My heart, your sons shall sit on the
throne of
Israel to the fourth generation (10:30).
Jehu had taken the most thorough means of
suppressing the
idolatry in Israel, and thus was granted protection on
his
throne, along with his sons after him, untothe
fourth
generation. The following chapters of 2 Kings
indicate that
the Lord was true to His word (as always; cf. Titus
1:2).
Although the reigns of Jehus sons were described as
kings who
9id evil in the sight of Yahweh, the Lord
allowed them to
reign to the fourth generation in order to fulfill His
promise
to Jehu.
Several years after the above events took place,
the
prophet Hosea expressed words that many skeptics have
claimed
are in opposition to what is stated in 2 Kings 9-10.
When
Gomer, Hoseas wife, bore a son, Hosea declared that
the Lord
said,Call his name Jezreel, for in a little while
I will
avenge the bloodshed of Jezreel on the house of Jehu,
and
bring an end to the kingdom of the house of Israel
(1:4).
Those trying to discredit the Bibles integrity
argue that
Hosea put himself into obvious disagreement
with the
inspired writer of 2 Kings, who thought that Jehu had
done
all that was in Gods heart. Skeptics claim
that the author
of 2 Kings heaped praise on Jehu for the Jezreel
massacre, but
Hosea contradicted him when he said that the Lord
would avenge
the blood of Jezreel, and bring to an end the reign of
the
house of Jehu in Israel. What can be said about this
obvious
disagreement? Are these two passages harmonious, or
is this a
legitimate contradiction that should cause Bible
believers
like the young man from West Virginia to reject the
book that
has been tried and tested for hundreds of years?
First, we cannot be 100% certain that Hosea 1:4 is
referring to the events recorded in 2 Kings 9-10.
Although
nearly all skeptics (and Bible commentators) link the
two
passages together, it must be understood that just
because 2
Kings 9-10 is the only place in the Old Testament that
describes suitable events located at Jezreel, it does
not mean
that Hosea must have been referring to those events.
The
honest student of Gods Word has to admit that Hosea
could
have been referring to Jehus sons who reigned after
him.
Perhaps his sons performed serious atrocities in
Jezreel that
are not recorded in 2 Kings. One cannot be certain
that Hosea
was indeed referring to the events recorded in 2 Kings
10.
Having made such a disclaimer, it is my position that
these
two passages should be linked, and thus the
alleged
contradiction raised by skeptics deserves an adequate
explanation: How could God tell Jehu to destroy the
house of
Ahab, and then later condemn him (his house) via the
words of
Hosea for having done so?
The answer really is quite simple. As Norman
Geisler and
Thomas Howe observed:God praised Jehu for obeying
Him in
destroying the house of Ahab, but condemned Jehu for
his
sinful motive in shedding their blood (1992, p.
194).
Skeptics are fond of citing 2 Kings 10:30 to support
their
position, but they often conveniently overlook verses
29 and
31, which state:
Jehu did not turn away from the sins of
Jeroboam, the son of Nebat, who had made Israel sin,
that
is, from the golden calves that were at Bethel and
Dan....
Jehu took no heed to walk in the law of the Lord God
of
Israel with all his heart; for he did not depart
from the
sins of Jeroboam, who had made Israel sin.
Jehu obeyed Gods command tostrike down the
house of
Ahab and utterly exterminate his descendants (2
Kings 9:7-8;
10:30), but he did not obey God in all that he
did (cf.
Genesis 6:22). The passage in 2 Kings 10:29-31
indicates that
even though Jehu had done what God commanded,he
did so out
of a carnal zeal that was tainted with protective
self-interest (Archer, 1982, p. 208). It seems
obvious that
since Jehu followed in the footsteps of Israels
first wicked
king by worshipping false gods and not walking
according to
Gods law, he did not destroy Ahabs descendants
out of any
devotion to the Lord. Furthermore, in commenting on
Jehus
actions, biblical scholar Gleason Archer noted:
The important principle set forth in Hosea
1:4
was that when blood is shed, even in the service of
God and
in obedience to His command, blood-guiltiness
attaches to
Gods agent himself if his motive was tainted with
carnal
self-interest rather than by a sincere concern for
the
purity of the faith and the preservation of Gods
truth
(such as, for example, animated Elijah when he had
the 450
prophets of Baal put to death after the contest with
them on
Mount Carmel) [1982, p. 209, parenthetical item in
orig.].
Considering Jehus actions by examining the
motives behind
those actions solves the alleged contradiction.
Jehus failure
to obey Gods commands and depart from the sins of
Jeroboam
revealed that he would have equally disobeyed the
other
commands as well, had it been contrary to his own
desires. The
story of Jehus conquest teaches a great lesson,
which Albert
Barnes acknowledged in his commentary on Hosea:
[I]f we do
what is the will of God for any end of our own, for
anything
except God, we do, in fact, our own will, not
Gods (1997).
Indeed, just as the apostle Paul taught in his
discourse on
love motives matter (1 Corinthians 13:1-3)!
FACTUAL CONTRADICTION #48
In What Order Did Satan Tempt Jesus?
If you have ever compared Matthews account of
Satan
tempting Jesus in the wilderness with Lukes
account, you
likely noticed that there was a difference in the
sequence of
the recorded events (Matthew 4:1-11; Luke 4:1-13).
Both
Matthew and Luke agree that Satan first tested Jesus
by
challenging Him to turn stones to bread. However,
while the
two disciples of Jesus agree on the content of the
next two
tests, the second and third temptations recorded by
Matthew
areflip-flopped in Lukes account. Matthew
recorded that
Satans second temptation involved him trying to
persuade
Jesus to throw Himself down from the pinnacle of the
Temple.
The third temptation listed by Matthew was Satans
attempt to
get Jesus to worship him. Even though Luke wrote about
the
same two events, he listed them in reverse
order Satan first
desired adoration from Jesus, and then challenged Him
to throw
Himself down off the pinnacle of the Temple. Based
upon this
difference, skeptics claim we have a clear-cut
factual
discrepancy.
The problem with this allegation is that it is
based upon
an assumption. Those who claim that the9isorder
of
temptations is a contradiction, presuppose that
history always
is written (or spoken) chronologically. However,
common sense
tells us otherwise. Open almost any world history
textbook,
and you will notice that even though most events are
recorded
chronologically, some are arranged topically. For
example, in
one chapter you may read about the European
civilization in
the late Middle Ages (A.D.
1000-1300).
Yet, in the very next chapter you might learn about
Medieval
India (150 B.C.-A.D.
1400). Authors arrange textbooks thematically in order
to
reduce the confusion that would arise if every major
event in
those textbooks were arranged chronologically. Even
when we
rehearse life experiences to friends and family,
oftentimes we
speak climactically rather than chronologically. A
teenager
may return home from an amusement park, and tell his
father
about all of the roller coasters he road at Six Flags.
Likely,
rather than mentioning all of them in the order he
road them,
he will start with the most exciting ones, and end
with the
boring ones (if there is indeed such a thing as a
boring
roller coaster).
Had Matthew and Luke claimed to arrange the
temptations of
Jesus chronologically, then the skeptics would have a
legitimate case. But, the fact of the matter is,
neither
Matthew nor Luke ever made any such claim. Either one
of the
two gospel writers recorded these events in the exact
order in
which they occurred, or both of them wrote topically.
Most
biblical scholars believe that it is very likely that
Matthew
was concerned more with the order of events in this
story
because of his use of words likethen (4:5,
Greek
tote) andagain (4:8, Greek
palin). These two
specific adverbs seem to indicate a more sequential
order of the temptations. Luke simply links the
events by
using the Greek words kai and de
(4:2,5-6,
translatedand). [The NKJV92s
translation of kai asthen in Luke 4:5 is
incorrect.
It should be translated simplyand (cf. ASV, KJV,
NASV, and RSV).] Similar
to the English wordand not having specific
chronological
implications, neither do the Greek words kai
and
de (Richards, 19, p. 230). In short, Lukes
account
of the temptations of Jesus is arranged topically (or
possibly
climactically), whereas Matthews account seems to
be arranged
chronologically.
FACTUAL CONTRADICTION #56
Cock-a-doodle-do...Twice?
Perhaps the most famous alleged Bible contradiction
centers
on Peters triple denial of Jesus and the crowing of
a
rooster. For years, skeptics have charged that
Marks account
of this event blatantly contradicts the other gospel
accounts,
thus supposedlyproving the imperfection of the
Scriptures.
Even Bible believers have questioned the differences
surrounding this event, yet relatively few have taken
the time
to understand them. Whenever people ask us about
Peters
denials and the differences within the gospel
accounts, we
often fail to give an adequate answer to their
questions (see
1 Peter 3:15). This lack of understanding, and poor
defense of
Gods Word, has led skeptics to become more
confident in their
position (i.e., that the Bible is not Gods Word),
and has
caused some Bible believers (like the young West
Virginia man
I mentioned earlier) to abandon their position on the
infallibility of the Scriptures.
The passages in question are found in Matthew 26,
Mark 14,
Luke 22, and John 13. Matthew, Luke, and John all
quoted Jesus
as saying that Peter would deny Him three times before
the
rooster crowed.
Jesus said to him,Assuredly, I say to
you that
this night, before the rooster crows, you will deny
Me three
times (Matthew 26:34).
Then He said,I tell you, Peter, the
rooster
shall not crow this day before you will deny three
times
that you know Me (Luke 22:34).
Jesus answered him...Most assuredly, I
say to
you, the rooster shall not crow till you have denied
Me
three times (John 13:38).
After the third denial actually took place, these
three
writers recorded that Jesus prophecy was fulfilled
exactly
the way He said it would be.
And immediately a rooster crowed. And
Peter
remembered the word of Jesus who had said to him,
Before
the rooster crows, you will deny Me three times
(Matthew
26:74b-75).
Immediately, while he was still speaking,
the
rooster crowed. And the Lord turned and looked at
Peter. And
Peter remembered the word of the Lord, how He had
said to
him,Before the rooster crows, you will deny Me
three
times (Luke 22:60-61).
Peter then denied again [for the third
time EL]; and immediately a
rooster
crowed (John 18:27).
Matthew, Luke, and John all indicated that Peter
denied
Jesus three times before the rooster crowed. Marks
account,
however, says otherwise. He recorded Jesus prophecy
as
follows:Assuredly, I say to you that today, even
this night,
before the rooster crows twice, you will deny
Me three
times (Mark 14:30, emp. added). Following Peters
first
denial of Jesus, we learn that hewent out on the
porch, and
a rooster crowed (Mark 14:68). After Peters
third denial of
Jesus, the rooster croweda second time.... Then
Peter called
to mind the word that Jesus had said to him,91Before
the
rooster crows twice, you will deny Me three
times
(Mark 14:72).
Mark differs from the other writers, in that he
specified
the rooster crowed once after Peters first denial,
and again
after his third denial. But, do these differences
represent a
legitimate contradiction? Absolutely not!
Consider the following illustration. A family of
three went
to a high school football game together for the first
time.
The father and son had been to several games prior to
this
one, but the mother never had been fortunate enough to
attend
a high school game until now. After entering the
stadium,
Ricky tells his 16-year-old son, Cary, that they will
meet him
right outside Gate 12 after the buzzer sounds.
Having
filed away the instructions, Cary races to the stands
to
ensure that he sees the opening kickoff. Rickys
wife, Vickie,
who did not hear the instructions he gave Cary, then
asks him
when they were going to see Cary again. He responds,
We are
going to meet him right outside the gate we just
entered after
the fourth buzzer. After the fourth buzzer?
But he
told Cary after the buzzer sounded they would
meet him.
Did Ricky contradict himself? No. At this particular
stadium,
the time keepers normally sound a buzzer after each
quarter.
But, when we sayat the buzzer, or when we speak
ofa
buzzer beater (such as in basketball), usually we
are
referring to the final buzzer. Cary was
familiar with
sports lingo, and thus Ricky told him they would see
him
after the buzzer sounds. Vickie, on the other
hand, having
never attended a football game in her life, was given
different instructions. In a more precise way, Ricky
instructed her that Cary would meet them, not after
the first,
second, or third buzzer, but after the fourth and
final buzzer
that marks the end of regulation play. Ricky knew that
if he
told Vickie,Cary will meet us after the buzzer
sounds, she
would have expected to meet him after the first buzzer
sounded. Thus, Ricky simply informed Vickie in a more
detailed
manner. Surely, no one would claim that Ricky had
contradicted
himself.
In a similar way, no one should assume that because
three
of the gospel writers mentioned one crowing,
while Mark
mentioned two crowings, that a contradiction
exists.
Realistically, there were tworooster crowings.
However, it
was the second one (the only one Matthew, Luke, and
John
mentioned) that was themain crowing (like the
fourth buzzer
was themain buzzer at the football game). In
the first
century, roosters were accustomed to crowing at
least
twice during the night. The first crowing (which
only Mark
mentioned 14:68) usually occurred between twelve and
one
oclock. Relatively few individuals ever heard or
acknowledged
this crowing (seecock, Faussets Bible
Dictionary,
1998). It is likely that Peter never heard it; else
surely his
slumbering conscience would have awakened.
The second crowing took place not long before
daybreak. It
was this latter crowing that commonly was called
the
cockcrowing. Why? Because it was at this time of
night (just
before daybreak) that roosters crowed the loudest, and
their
shrill clarion was useful in summoning laborers
to work (see
cock-crowing, McClintock and Strong, 1968,
2:398). This
crowing of the roosters served as an alarm clock to
those in
the ancient world. Mark recorded earlier in his
gospel
account that Jesus spoke of thismain crowing
when He said:
Watch therefore, for you do not know when the
master of the
house is coming in the evening, at midnight, at
the crowing
of the rooster, or in the morning (Mark 13:35,
emp.
added). Interestingly, even when workers were called
to their
labors via artificial devices (e.g., bugles), this
time of the
night still was designated by the proverbial phrase,
the
cockcrowing (seecock-crowing in McClintock
and Strong,
2:398). If you lived in the first century, and your
boss said
to be ready to work whenthe rooster crows, you
would know
he meant that work begins just before daybreak. If he
said
that work begins at the second crowing of the rooster,
likewise, you would know he meant the same
thing work begins
just before daylight. These are not contradictory
statements,
but rather two ways of saying the same thing.
When Jesus said,Before the rooster crows, you
will deny
Me three times (Matthew 26:34), it is obvious that
He was
using the phrasethe rooster crows in the more
conventional
way. Mark, on the other hand, specified that there
were two
crowings. In the same way that the husband gives his
wife more
detailed instructions concerning a football game, Mark
used
greater precision in recording this event. It may be
that Mark
quoted the exact words of Jesus, while the other
writers
(under the guidance of the Holy Spirit) saw fit to
employ the
less definite style to indicate the same time of night
(McGarvey, 1875, p. 355). Or, perhaps Jesus made both
statements. After Peter declared that he never would
deny the
Lord, Jesus could have repeated His first comment and
added
another detail, saying:[E]ven this night, before
the rooster
crows twice, you will deny Me three times
(Mark 14:30,
emp. added). We cannot be certain why Marks account
is worded
differently than the other writers, but by
understanding that
the rooster crowing commonly was used to
indicate a time
just before daybreak, we can be assured that
absolutely no
contradiction exists among the gospel writers.
CONCLUSION
In just over six thousand words, six of the seventy
factual Bible contradictions given to the young
West
Virginian who abandoned his faith in the inspired,
inerrant
Word of God have been radically downgraded from
factual to
fictitious. If space permitted, each one of the
factual
contradictions could be refuted rather easily with the
proper
use of bothreason andrevelation.
What would have happened if the young man from West
Virginia had taken the time to investigate these
matters?
Where would he be today, had someone been able to show
him how
all thesefactual Bible contradictions are
anything but
factual? Surely, by now you realize that the blows of
the
critics axe need not shake the Christians faith.
Indeed,
after almost 2,000 years ofskeptics blows,
Gods forest of
inspiration still stands unmarred.
REFERENCES
Archer, Gleason L. (1982), An Encyclopedia of
Bible
Difficulties (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan).
Barnes, Albert (1997), Barnes Notes
(Electronic
Database: Biblesoft).
Cassuto, U. (1961), A Commentary on the Book of
Genesis (Jerusalem: Magnes).
Cock (1998), Faussets Bible
Dictionary
(Electronic Database: Biblesoft).
Cock-crowing, McClintock, John and James
Strong (1968
reprint), Cyclopaedia of Biblical, Theological, and
Ecclesiastical Literature (Grand Rapids, MI:
Baker).
Dillard, Raymond B. and Tremper Longman III
(1994), An
Introduction to the Old Testament (Grand Rapids,
MI:
Zondervan).
Geisler, Norman L. and Thomas A. Howe (1992),
When
Critics Ask (Wheaton, IL: Victor Books).
Hamilton, Victor P. (1990), The Book of
Genesis
(Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans).
Kaiser, Walter C. Jr., Peter H. Davids, F.F. Bruce,
and
Manfred T. Brauch (1996), Hard Sayings of the
Bible
(Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press).
Keil, C.F. and F. Delitzsch (1996), Keil and
Delitzsch
Commentary on the Old Testament (Electronic
Database:
Biblesoft), new updated edition.
Kitchen, Kenneth (1966), Ancient Orient and Old
Testament (Chicago: Inter-Varsity Press).
Leupold, Herbert C. (1942), Exposition of
Genesis
(Grand Rapids, MI: Baker).
McGarvey, J.W. (1875), Commentary on Matthew and
Mark (Delight AR: Gospel Light).
Richards, Larry (19), 735 Baffling Bible
Questions
Answered (Grand Rapids, MI: Revell).
The Wycliffe Bible Commentary (1962),
(Electronic
Database: Biblesoft).
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