Why Should We Study the Bible?

By Herman Mason

The Bible is a great book. In fact it is The Great Book. It came from God and contains the very things God wants us to know so that man can prepare himself for heaven. This alone ought to be reason enough to cause man to study the Bible. However, let us consider a few other reasons:

1. Ignorance (Lack of Knowledge) Leads to Error. God said to His people through the prophet Hosea many years ago, “My people are destroyed for lack of knowledge” (Hosea 4:6). Jesus said to the Sadducees, “Ye do err, not knowing the scriptures” (Matt. 22:29). There are two reasons why people do not do God’s will. (a) They do not know, or (b) They do not have the proper respect for what God says in His word. We need to accept His word as the word of God, and not as the word of man (1 Thess. 2:13). Since it is necessary to do the will of God in order to get to heaven (Matt. 7:21; Rev. 22:14) our desire to know what God’s will is ought to cause each one of us to diligently search the word of God so that we might know. We cannot do until we know. Any substitute for God’s word is error and will not be acceptable to God.

2. One Must Know Before He Can Teach Others. What is taught must be what the apostles and other inspired men taught (2 Tim. 2:2; 1 Peter 4:11). In fact, he who teaches otherwise will “be accursed” (Gal. 1:8, 9). All Christians ought to be teachers. The writer of Hebrews rebuked those to whom he wrote for not. being able to teach others (Hebrews 5:12-14). This, I am afraid, is the sad spectacle of too many professed followers of Christ today. Peter says we are to give answer for the “reason of the hope that is in you” (1 Peter 3:15). The only way this can be done is by having a knowledge of God’s word. This comes by study.

3. Because God’s Word Is Eternal (1 Peter 1:23-25). Jesus said, “Heaven and earth shall pass away, but my words shall not pass away” (Matt. 24:35). God’s word is the only reliable source to which man can go for information concerning spiritual matters. Our faith needs to be not “in the wisdom of men, but in the power of God” (1 Cor. 2:5). The statement by Solomon, “Fear God, and keep his commandments” is just as true today as when Solomon penned the statement (see Acts 10:34, 35). We hear David saying “Through thy precepts I get understanding: therefore I hate every false way. Thy word is a lamp unto my feet, and a light unto my path” (Psalm 119:104, 105).

4. We Shall Be Judged by God’s Word. Jesus said, “The word that I have spoken, the same shall judge him in the last day” (John 12:48). This happens to be one of my “pet” verses. I emphasize it at all times in my preaching. We know exactly what the standard of judgment will be. We therefore, should have a desire to know what it is. Paul also informs us that the gospel of Christ will be the standard of judgment (Romans 2:16). Since he taught “the commandments of the Lord” he taught what the Lord had spoken. We know then exactly what the Lord will hold us responsible for. It will be the word of God as contained in the New Testament scriptures. This ought to be reason enough for anyone to study God’s word. It will be indeed a poor excuse for you or me to say on the day of judgment, “I didn’t know” with so many Bibles in this land.

Let us then take advantage of the privilege we have now to do as Paul told Timothy, “Study to shew thyself approved unto God” (2 Tim. 2:15). This is the way we come to know God’s word.

Truth Magazine XXII: 47, p. 754
November 30, 1978

For the Truth’s Sake: The Danger of Reveling

By Ron Halbrook

For The Truth’s Sake,” the Holy Spirit through the Word of God convicts men of sin, righteousness, and judgment (John 16:7-13). All men are is sin until they believe and obey the gospel of Jesus Christ, which is “the power of God unto salvation” (Romans 1:16). Not only do the excesses of drunken debauchery condemn us in sin and unbelief, but also the very common practice of reveling. Reveling is not a drunken stupor in which one is unable to coordinate his muscles. The reveler may sing and shout and dance until late at night, and frequently he adds the stimulation of an intoxicant-wine, beer, or whiskey. In short, reveling may be defined as party making under the influence of intoxicants.

Historians find references in ancient classical writers to the “rousing drinking parties, with magnificent goblets,” enjoyed by Persians kings (Biblical Archaeologist, Vol. 38, Nos. 3 & 4. pp. 69-70). Lavish entertainment was also provided. An example of this is found in Esther 1. At a great celebration, the king “gave them drink in vessels of gold,” became “merry with wine,” and then commanded his queen to make a display of her personal beauty before the crowds. When she refused, he flew into a rage, and eventually deposed her. This occurred in the 6th century B.C. Earlier in that century, Belshazzar drank wine in a feast and was moved to drink it from “the golden and silver vessels” which had come from the temple of God in Jerusalem. God condemned the king to death (Daniel 5). Respect for truth and moral convictions are loosened by intoxicated party making.

Some people say they oppose drunken debauchery, but they will defend reveling. Churches sometimes give parties with singing, dancing, and drinking into the late night and early morning hours! To raise money for “the Lord’s Work”! The Bible calls such activities “the works of the flesh . . . drunkenness, revelings, and such like: of the which I tell you before, as I have also told you in time past, that they which do such things shall not inherit the kingdom of God” (Gal. 5:19-21). Sin cannot be chaperoned or condoned. To compromise with such sins as “revellings” is to leave “the will of God” to live “in the flesh to the lusts of men” (1 Pet. 4:1-3).

Reveling is sinful. Like any sin persisted in, it leads a person further and further from the cross of Jesus Christ. Lives become tangled more and more in sin and unbelief, hearts so hardened that the call of the gospel will be forever unheeded. Christians need to confess and turn away from such wrongs, praying God’s forgiveness. All men need to become conscious of their sins-such sins as reveling-and obey the gospel before it is too late. By faith in Christ, be born of the water and of the Spirit (John 3:1-16).

Truth Magazine XXII: 46, p. 745
November 23, 1978

Born of God or Begotten of God?

By Bill Reeves

As far back as 1962, brother Carl Ketcherside was teaching that a believer in the divinity of Christ (faith only) was thereby “begotten of God” and, therefore, should be recognized as a “child of God in prospect.” Following English expressions and concepts of the process of physical birth (conception, begettal; delivery, birth; the begettal on the part of the father, the birth on the part of the mother), he began to apply such to the problem of unity and fellowship. Coming to New Testament texts, written not in English, but in Greek, he made application of his English expressions and concepts. 1 John 5:1 was one of these texts: “Whosoever believeth that Jesus is the Christ is begotten of God.” Using his English definitions and concepts, he concluded that a believer in Christ (believer in the facts of the divinity and death of Jesus Christ on the cross) is a child of God in prospect, because he was spiritually conceived, or begotten, by God! If in some sense he is a child of God, should we refuse him fellowship, at least in some degree? If we have the same father, are. we not brothers?

Brother Ketcherside was not only making arguments based on English terminology, and therefore of no import in matters of a text originally written in Greek, but was at the same time using New Testament texts out of context; all this in an effort to extend the basis of fellowship.

Recently I was reminded that Brother T. W. Brents, in his widely read book, The Gospel Plan of Salvation (1874), in the chapter entitled “The New Birth,” made the same distinction between “begettal” and “birth,” referring to believers (believe only) as being begotten, but not yet born, and to baptized believers as “born again” ones. So, it appeared to this person that Brents was teaching in the last century what some are teaching today, in making the begettal-birth distinction.

Did Brother Brents argue the same position as Brother Ketcherside and some present-day brethren? Yes and no! He did make the same distinction between beget and give birth to, using the same fallacious arguments that some today make, but he certainly was not making the same use of these arguments. Brents was trying to answer the “faith only” advocates, who claimed to be born again children of God (without having been baptized), by “proving” that they were only begotten by their faith (only), but that they were not yet “born again” of water and of the Spirit! He certainly was not advocating any kind of recognition of the “faith only” denominationalists as children of God in prospect and, therefore, as being in the family of God in some sense!

Let us examine Brents reasoning and arguments, inasmuch as they are virtually the same presented by Ketcherside and others today (although, as we have seen, for a different purpose or view in mind). After quoting 1 Jn. 5:1, 18, he says, “In keeping with the Bible Union and Anderson’s translations, we have exchanged the word born and begotten, in each of the verses quoted, and we venture to state further that there is not a place in the New Testament where the words `born of God’ occurs, that a faithful translation would not render `begotten of God.’ In no place will the Spirit’s teaching, faithfully translated, represent us as born of God-born of our Father. Such a thought is absurd in the very nature of things; and no one who understands the new birth, or the natural birth, from which the figure was drawn, will entertain such a thought or use such language.”

Many faithful translations use “born” in these two verses, instead of “begotten,” among them being the NASV and the NIV, because both of these words “faithfully” translate the Greek word in the text. In John 1:13, “born of God” is the translation of many versions (NIV, ASV, NASV, KJV, etc.). Brother Brents is simply wrong in his assertion concerning what “faithful translations” will or will not do. The Greek word under consideration for translation is gennao, which on p. 113 of Thayer is translated both “to be begotten” and “to be born.” The Greek does not make the distinction which the English does. This very word, found in 1 Jn. 5:1, 18, also appears in Lk. 1:13, 57 and 23:29. In these passages the word is used in reference to women giving birth. The Greek does not have one word for “beget” and another one for “give birth to.” Such a distinction is a characteristic_ of the English, not of the Greek. When one makes an argument based on this distinction, he is arguing from the English, and not from the Greek New Testament text!

Brents then quotes 1 Pet. 1:23; 1 Cor. 4:15 and Jas. 1:18, rightly showing that one is begotten of God by the Word preached. But before continuing, we might note that in the Greek texts referred to, gennao appears in the first two, and another word, apokueo, appears in the last one. According to p. 64 of Thayer, the word means “to be pregnant, to bring forth from the womb, to give birth to, to produce.” Brents quotes Jas. 1:18 to insist that “beget” is what the Word does.

He then proceeds to argue that believing the facts of the gospel “begets” one, but that he is still not “born again.” Noting Jas. 2:19 and Mark 3:11, he argues that demons believe and acknowledge Jesus’ deity. “Were they born again?” he asks, to which we answer, No, and neither were they begotten of God! Brother Ketcherside, are these demons children of God in prospect?

One of the chief fallacies of Brother Brents argumentation is that he uses “believe” in the sense of faith only (such as denominationalists have, in that they have mentally accepted as true certain facts) in those passages where it is used comprehensively of man’s part in obeying the gospel. He quotes Jn. 12:42, 43, and says, “There are now many such as these, chief rulers were then; are they born again?” No, neither are they begotten of God! “If a man be born again when he first believes the gospel, when is he begotten, and where are the elements of birth-water and spirit-of which Jesus said he should be born?” Here Brents uses “first believes” in the sense of “first only believes” (faith only), and a man is neither born nor begotten of God when he “first only believes” some proclaimed facts. (Remember, however, that Brents was battling with denominationalists who claimed to be born again by faith only. He was not arguing that when one is “begotten” by believing facts of a proclaimed, inspired, message, although he is not yet “born again,” still he is already a part of God’s family as a prospective child of God, waiting to be “born”!).

Brents next quotes Jn. l:ll, 12, and misuses it like so many of my brethren through the years have done (I am included). “Jesus came to his own prepared people, and many of them did not receive Him, or believe on Him; but to as many of them as did receive Him by believing on his name, He gave the power or privilege of becoming sons of God. Believing on His name, then, did not make them sons, but prepared them to become sons. When a man believes the gospel, and with meekness receives it into a good and honest heart, he is then begotten of God, and is prepared to be born. The vital principle is then implanted in the heart; but he is no more born again at that time than he was physically born the moment he was conceived.”

Brethren have used this passage in debate with Baptists, and with others, to “prove” that faith alone does not make one a child of God, but only gives him the right to become one! This is not what John is saying! Although this affirmation is true, in the main, this passage does not prove it. John is saying that although God was not obligated to give the power or right or even privilege to anyone to be His child, He did give it, and still gives it, to those who receive Christ; that is, to believers (in the comprehensive sense of the word “believe”). One cannot claim sonship with God on the basis of being a Jew (Jesus’ own), but only on the basis of receiving Christ. John is not using “believe” in the sense of “faith only,” and so is not making the point that Brents, and many brethren today, makes in answer to sectarian doctrine.

The word “become,” in English, has a future ring to it. “What do you plan to become when you grow up?” we say to the small child. So, here in John 1:12, the English rendering, “to become children of God” lends itself to the idea that reference is to something yet future. But, actually the Greek texts employs an aorist infinitive, the aorist tense indicating simple past tense. John is saying that Jesus came to the Jews, but the Jews, His own people, as a people did not receive Him as the Messiah and, therefore, did not become children of God. On the other hand, those that did receive Him, that is, did believe on Him (not faith only, but comprehensive faith) became children of God! They became children of God when they received Christ, because God gives such a right to believers. This is all that John is saying.

This is made evident also from the use of the word “receive.” This is not mere mental reception (faith only)! The same Greek word is used in John 13:20 and Matt. 13:20. Will preachers use these passages in the sense of “faith only”? In Acts 2:41, although the Greek word translated “receive” is a different one from that used in the texts mentioned above, one can plainly see that “receive” is used in the sense of obedience! People who do not do what Christ commands, do not receive Him (in the Bible sense of the word).

Brents quotes Acts 9:1-5, and rightly affirms that Saul’s faith was changed from believing that Jesus was an impostor, to the belief of the truth that He was the Son of God. “He was then begotten of God; but was he born again?” No, Brother Brents, he was not then begotten of God, nor born of God, which is the same thing. Neither! One who is begotten or born of God is one who is continually doing righteousness (1 Jn. 2:29) and not sin (3:9). He is a child of God (3:10). John does not say, “in prospect,” Brother Ketcherside, and Brother Brents, you will agree that every “child of God” has been “born again.” So, both brethren, and others today, are misapplying 1 Jn. 5:1. They might as well quote 1 Jn. 4:7 and conclude that every lover is a child of God in prospect! Let us read 5:18 again, “We know that whosoever is begotten of God sinneth not; but he that was begotten of God keepeth himself, and the evil one toucheth him not.” Now, if “begotten of God” does not mean the same as “born of God,” tell me what the “begotten of God” lacks by not being “Born again?” According to this passage he does not go on sinning and the evil one does not touch him! Sounds like he is in good shape! Or, consider the happy condition of the “begotten” one, as described in 1 Pet. 1:3, 4: “Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who according to his great mercy begat us again unto a living hope by the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead, unto an inheritance incorruptible, and undefiled, and that fadeth not away, reserved in heaven for you.” Not a bad situation for a person who has been “begotten,” but not “born again” (because he has not yet been baptized)!

The apostle John is telling the Gnostic that he is not a child of God because he is not a believer in Jesus Christ. John is not using “believe” in 5:1 in the sense of “faith only.” Both Brents and Ketcherside ignore this simple fact and, taking the passage completely out of context, make “begotten” ones different from “born again” ones, Brents for one purpose and Ketcherside for another. Brents had the truth on his contention that “faith only” did not make one a child of God, but he used fallacious arguments to prove it. Ketcherside has the wrong contention, trying to get “begotten” ones somehow and in some sense into God’s family, before they are baptized (“born again”). Both his contention and his arguments are fallacious!

To judge it idiomatic English to use “beget” in reference to the implantation of seed, as is the role of the father, and “give birth to” (be born) in reference to bringing forth, as is the role of the mother, I have no objection. On the other hand, to affirm that gennao cannot rightly be translated “be born” (or some similar expression), in reference to seed and fathers and that it must be translated “beget,” is to affirm something that simply is not true. The New Testament scriptures use that word in reference to the role of both men and women. There is no distinction. Fabricated distinctions are the product of human sophistry, designed to support unscriptural concepts. If brethren want to extend some fellowship, or in some sense recognize as children of God, those who have not been baptized into Christ, they will have to find authority for it somewhere else than in their contrived distinction between the terms “beget” and “be born,” as used in the New Testament as translations of gennao. Brethren, beware of the subtleties of human wisdom!

Truth Magazine XXII: 46, pp. 746-748
November 23, 1978

“That Ye May Know” (2)

By William Y. Beasley

John did not keep his readers in the dark as to the reason for his writing the book of first John: “These things have I written unto you, that ye may know that ye have eternal life, even unto you that believe on the name of the Son of God” (5:13). In our last lesson we considered the basis of our faith-the testimony of eye, ear and hand witnesses (that which was known by the physical senses); and the basis of our fellowship-to “walk in the light, as he is in the light” (1 John 1:7):

God’s Paraclete (1 John 2:1-2)

Some may Have gotten the idea from 1 John 1:8, 10, written to the saved, that it was alright to sin-“everyone does.” John wrote “that ye may not sin” (2:1). There is no sin which we can entirely blame on another person and there is no sin that we are justified in committing before God. Sin is exceedingly terrible! We do not, I fear, appreciate the sinfulness of sin, but sin is not the end. What do we do with sin? What do we do when we realize that we are guilty of sin?

Although John wrote that his readers “may not sin” (2:1), his next words were “And if any man sin . . . ” For some time, this has come across on reading as “but” or “but when.” It is most interesting to me that it is so rendered in some of the modern speech translations: (1) “. . . but if anyone should sin . . .” (TCNT), (2) “. . . yet if anyone does sin . . .” (Goodspeed), (3) “But if a man should sin . . .” (Phillips), and (4) “But if anyone does sin . . .” (New International Version). It is evident that the Greek word kai can, under some circumstances, be translated by words other than “and.”

When we first learned that we were sinners before God, we turned to Jesus Christ in baptism-crying, as it were, “Lord, save me” (Acts 22:16; 1 Pet. 3:21)! When we learn we have sinned, after our primary obedience to the gospel, we turn once again to our Paraclete (Advocate, Comforter-John 14:16, 26, Helper, Counsel for defence, One who will intercede for us, etc.), Jesus Christ. In the term “Paraclete,” we see all of the ideas expressed above and much more. Our Paraclete does not intercede for us just because we have sinned, but He does when we obey His will (1 John 1:9; James 5:16). Jesus Christ was offered as the “propitiation” for “the whole world” (John 3:16), but not all will accept His sacrificial death in their behalf (Matt. 7:13-14; Rom. 10:16).

Knowing God (1 John 2:3-6)

To “know” Jesus is to “keep His commandments” (2:3; Matt. 7:21ff; John 15:14). To claim otherwise is to be guilty of lying (2:4). There is some question as to what is modified by the phrase, “Hereby we know that we are in him” (2:5). The KJV has it modifying the preceding statement while the ASV connects it with what follows. It teaches truth if applied to either or both. We know we are in Him when we keep His word (commandments) and/or when we “walk even as He walked” (2:6; 1 Pet. 2:23, 29; John 13:15).

A New Commandment (1 John 2:7-11)

The “old commandment” is “the word” (2:7). This could refer to the word of Christ or to the Word, Christ, i.e., “to walk even as He walked” (2:6). The “new commandment” is love. The subject under consideration is love of one’s brother (2:9-11). This commandment is “new” in degree; we are to love one another, Jesus said, “even as I have loved you” (John 13:34).

One cannot walk in the light and hate his brother (2:9). Think of someone whom you love-their love, affection, goodwill means much to you. Picture yourself speaking to them and their turning up their nose, refusing to speak, pretending to not hear-that hurts doesn’t it? The church member who would do such to a brother-in-Christ “is in the darkness, and knoweth not whither he goeth, because the darkness hath blinded his eyes” (2:11). This, of course, is but one application of hating a brother. The same principle would apply to the one who would refuse a brother in need (1 John 3:17), refuse to go to the one astray (Jas. 5:19-20), refuse to forgive (Matt. 6:12-15; Mark 11:2526), etc.

Conclusion

Do you, dear reader, “know that ye have eternal life” (1 John 5:13)? Do you turn to the Paraclete (Advocate) with the Father when you see your sin? Are you keeping His commandments (word)? Are you walking even as He walked? Do you love your brother/sister in Christ?

Truth Magazine XXII: 46, p. 744
November 23, 1978