Is the Bible historically accurate? Are there any contradictions in the Bible? If we look too closely at the Bible might we find things that will destroy our faith? Should I be afraid that some new archeological discovery will prove the Bible wrong? How much freedom do I have to interpret the Bible?
Combining history, Scripture, and an understanding of human nature, Dr. Thompson takes on the difficult questions regarding the Bible and inspiration. He goes beyond the question of whether you can trust the Bible to ask whether you can trust yourself as you study.
This unique study of inspiration uses internal evidence from the Bible text, its history, collection, and transmission to look at the way in which God works through prophets and Bible writers. As an experiential lens, he uses the experience of the Seventh-day Adventist community, of which he is a part, and its reception and use of Ellen White as God’s messenger. This provides an example of someone who produced an incredible volume of written material in her lifetime, yet maintained a great humility and understood her own spiritual experience as one of growth.
However, Inspiration: Hard Questions: Honest Answers is not just for Seventh-day Adventists. The lessons, drawn from the experience of one community, have wide applicability as we look at a range of views on biblical interpretation, experience, tradition, and contemporary claims of a prophetic word. All communities of faith would do well to ask the hard questions addressed in this book and to learn from the history and experience of others.
Ultimately, the author is addressing a question that comes to all of us: What is God’s will and how can I know it? Can I be certain? To find the answers we need, Dr. Thompson reminds us “We cannot just know Scripture, we have to know God.”
In this Second Revised Edition, you will find a new “bridge” chapter, designed to invite readers outside of the Adventist tradition to join in the conversation, as well as a number of minor updates, and a set of beautiful photographs and drawings inspired by scripture, prepared for this edition by Wanda Thompson. It is not enough to determine how the inspiration of scripture works as a theological tenet or a doctrinal point. Ultimately, for God’s Word in scripture to accomplish its mission, we must each be inspired by it as well.
A must read for the thinking Christian, or engaged skeptic. Agree with other reviews. This is a must have in your library on the nature of Divine inspiration. I have the hardbound copy, and hoped for it’s re-release, as a digitized version as well. Now both are here. This book is a breath of fresh air for the thinking Christian, struggling with the apparent inconsistencies of inspiration and the mental gymnastics that we undergo to support so-called “blind faith”. Alden Thompson follows that pathway through the blending of the human and divine,…
Very well done!!! Well written, no axes to grind, thoughtful, insightful. Even if you don’t agree with him, he will give you a lot to think about and some new perspectives to ponder. It’s well worth the read no matter where you’re at on the biblical inspiration spectrum; an excellent book.
A must read for any Christian and particularly Adventists. … A must read for any Christian and particularly Adventists. While this may appear to be an academic issue for those dwelling in ivory towers – it is not. The issue of verbal inspiration is a significant issue that undergirds many of the theological discussion within churches ‘Thus sayeth the Lord’, is the cry of the fundamentalist who wants to keep things simple and so knowingly or unknowingly – verbal inspiration dominates. This book becomes the important counterbalance to this.