Ten Reasons to Believe in the Bible
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Lesson OneThe Evidence of Honesty5 Activities|1 Assessment
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Lesson TwoThe Evidence of Preservation5 Activities|1 Assessment
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Lesson ThreeThe Evidence Of Divine Claims5 Activities|1 Assessment
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Lesson FourThe Evidence Of Miracles5 Activities|1 Assessment
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Lesson FiveThe Evidence of Accuracy5 Activities|1 Assessment
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Lesson SixThe Evidence Of Unity5 Activities|1 Assessment
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Lesson SevenThe Evidence Of Endorsement5 Activities|1 Assessment
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Lesson EightThe Evidence Of Prophecy5 Activities|1 Assessment
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Lesson NineThe Evidence Of Survival5 Activities|1 Assessment
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Lesson TenThe Evidence Of Changed Lives5 Activities|1 Assessment
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Course Wrap-UpCourse Completion1 Activity|1 Assessment
Participants 105
Overview and Objectives
Lesson Overview
The Bible is painfully honest. It shows Jacob, the father of its “chosen people,” to be a deceiver. It describes Moses, the lawgiver, as an insecure, reluctant leader, who, in his first attempt to come to the aid of his own people, killed a man, and then ran for his life to the desert. It portrays David not only as Israel’s most loved king, general, and spiritual leader, but as one who took another man’s wife and then, to cover his own sin, conspired to have her husband killed. At one point, the Scriptures accuse the people of God, the nation of Israel, as being so bad that they made Sodom and Gomorrah look good by comparison (Ezekiel 16:46-52). The Bible represents human nature as hostile to God. It predicts a future full of trouble. It teaches that the road to heaven is narrow and the way to hell is wide. Scripture was clearly not written for those who want simple answers or an easy, optimistic view of religion and human nature.
Lesson Objectives
When you complete this lesson, you should be able to:
- Explain that the Bible can never be accused of cleaning up or white-washing human nature.
- Explain why the Bible’s honesty gives us reason to trust its credibility.
- Explain our tendency to do wrong, even though we might in our hearts really want to do right.
Personal Reflection
As you proceed through this lesson have the following question in mind.
Have you ever heard someone say that the Bible has changed human nature in some way, positively or negatively? How? What reasons did they give? Did you believe them?