19 Facts About Biblical inerrancy

1.

Biblical inerrancy is the belief that the Bible "is without error or fault in all its teaching"; or, at least, that "Scripture in the original manuscripts does not affirm anything that is contrary to fact".

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2.

Belief in Biblical inerrancy is of particular significance within parts of evangelicalism, where it is formulated in the "Chicago Statement on Biblical Inerrancy".

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3.

The word Biblical inerrancy comes from the English word inerrant, from the Latin inerrantem, .

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4.

Doctrine of Biblical inerrancy began to develop as a response to these Protestant attitudes.

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5.

Where inerrancy refers to what the Holy Spirit is saying to the churches through the biblical writers, we support its use.

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6.

Norman Geisler and William Nix say that scriptural Biblical inerrancy is established by a number of observations and processes, which include:.

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7.

Biblical inerrancy says, "The development of ideas of 'biblical infallibility' or 'inerrancy' within Protestantism can be traced to the United States in the middle of the nineteenth century".

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8.

People who believe in Biblical inerrancy think that the Bible does not merely contain the Word of God, but every word of it is, because of verbal inspiration, the direct, immediate word of God.

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9.

Bible is inspired is, indeed, a primary Christian conviction; it is from this that certain consequences have been drawn, such as infallibility and Biblical inerrancy, which retain their place in Christian thought because they are held to be bound up with the affirmation of inspiration.

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10.

Biblical inerrancy says there are expressly false statements in the Bible, but they are reported accurately.

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11.

Those who believe in Biblical inerrancy hold that the scientific, geographic, and historic details of the scriptural texts in their original manuscripts are completely true and without error, though the scientific claims of scripture must be interpreted in the light of its phenomenological nature, not just with strict, clinical literality, which was foreign to historical narratives.

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12.

Proponents of biblical inerrancy generally do not teach that the Bible was dictated directly by God, but that God used the "distinctive personalities and literary styles of the writers" of scripture and that God's inspiration guided them to flawlessly project his message through their own language and personality.

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13.

Scholars who are proponents of biblical inerrancy acknowledge the potential for human error in transmission and translation, and therefore only affirm as the Word of God translations that "faithfully represent the original".

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14.

Proponents of biblical inerrancy often cite 2 Timothy 3:16 as evidence that scripture is inerrant.

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15.

View that biblical inerrancy can be justified by an appeal to prooftexts that refer to its divine inspiration has been criticized as circular reasoning, because these statements are only considered to be true if the Bible is already thought to be inerrant.

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16.

Since textual criticism suggests that the manuscript copies are not perfect, strict Biblical inerrancy is only applied to the original autographs rather than the copies.

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17.

Biblical inerrancy was generally considered to hold the most extreme form of this position.

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18.

Catholics as for Protestants, the challenge to Biblical inerrancy became serious when the Bible began to come into conflict with science: first astronomy, then geology and finally biology .

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19.

Roman Catholics, inerrancy is understood as a consequence of biblical inspiration; it has to do more with the truth of the Bible as a whole than with any theory of verbal inerrancy.

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