Is the Bible True? - A Remarkable Book Is the Bible True? - "…By inspiration of God" Is the Bible True? - The Test of Prophecy
 
 Is the Bible true? Certainly the Bible is a remarkable book --  unquestionably the world's all-time bestseller with countless millions  of copies in print. A single Bible distribution organization reported  delivering over 627,000,000 Bibles worldwide in one year alone (United  Bible Societies, 1999). Actually, the Bible is a compilation of 66 books  written by over 40 separate authors from a variety of backgrounds (from  lowly peasants to noble kings) over a period of at least 1,600 years.  These 66 books are divided in two principle parts, the "Old Testament"  (39 books) and the "New Testament" (27 books). The Bible was completed  in its entirety nearly 2,000 years ago and stands today as the  best-preserved literary work of all antiquity with over 24,000 ancient  New Testament manuscripts discovered thus far. Compare this with the  second best-preserved literary work of antiquity, Homer's Iliad, with only 643 preserved manuscripts discovered to date. 
 So, is the Bible true? If the Bible is indeed what it claims to be, the  implications for us are considerable. The Bible candidly claims to be  "given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for  reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness" (2 Timothy  3:16). Of course, the Bible is not the only book to claim divine  inspiration, but it is unique in that it offers substantial evidence to  back its claims. It even goes so far as to challenge its readers to put  it to the test, exhorting us to "Test all things" (1 Thessalonians  5:21). 
 Is the Bible True? Unquestionably, the single greatest evidence lending  to the veracity of the Bible's claims of divine inspiration is the  fulfillment of Bible prophecy. Consider this: if man were able to  clearly and consistently foresee the future, would the billion-dollar  Las Vegas gambling industry exist? We're willing to bet it wouldn't. As  man by himself is unable to foresee future events, prophecy is a  reasonable indicator of supernatural inspiration. The Bible purports to  contain more than a thousand inspired prophecies. The vast majority of these prophecies have already come to pass and can be verified by secular history.  Consider, for example, Ezekiel's prophecies concerning God's judgment  against the ancient Phoenician capital of Tyre (Ezekiel, chapter 26).  The prophecy states that Tyre would first be razed by Babylonian King  Nebuchadnezzar. Later, it would be utterly destroyed by a coalition of  nations, flattened like the top of a rock, its ruins (and even its dust)  scraped and thrown into the sea, becoming a place for fishermen to  spread their nets. The surrounding nations would witness Tyre's fate and  surrender without a fight. It's a rather odd prophecy. Amazingly, the  conditions of Ezekiel's prophecy were fulfilled, even to the tiniest  detail. Nebuchadnezzar sacked Tyre. Later, Alexander the Great led a  coalition of nations against Tyre, demolished it, scraped it to bedrock  and threw its ruins into the sea. The ancient site became (and remains  to this day) a place for local fishermen to spread their nets to dry.  (For secular confirmation, see General History for Colleges and High Schools, Boston, Ginn & Co., p. 55).