Explore

Feedback archiveFeedback 2017

Is the Bible’s historical record reliable?

Often, when biblical ‘errors’ come up, the solution is really quite simple. Beck B., U.S., writes:

abraham-isaac
Abraham offers his son Isaac. By Domenichino, painted between 1627 and 1628. (Genesis 22:1–14)
So, I was discussing the Bible with a friend and this friend believes that the Bible is false, except for the Gospels. They went on to describe 2nd Kings verses 18–9 and how it mentions that God destroyed the Assyrians, however (I think it was the Israelites), there are apparently Assyrian accounts that show that the Israelites paid off the Assyrians to not fight, something to that effect, and were not destroyed by God. Basically, he was trying to demonstrate historical conflicts within the Bible. Could you provide a counterclaim of this to me?

, CMI-US, responds:

Your friend’s position is, with all respect, incoherent. The Bible can’t be untrue, except for the Gospels, because the Gospels are inextricably connected with everything that comes before and after them. So if the Gospels are true, they witness to the truth of the rest of Scripture. And if the rest of Scripture is false, so are the Gospels.

This is because Jesus didn’t just drop onto the scene out of nowhere; His incarnation was the culmination of a plan of salvation revealed as far back as Genesis 3. It involved God creating a nation fathered by a man and his barren wife (Abraham and Sarah), bringing that nation through slavery in Egypt, eventually bringing them to the Promised Land, and then bringing out the Davidic kingly line. All along the way ‘saviors’ came who foreshadowed the Savior who would eventually come, but all of these men failed, because they were sinful, like their first father, Adam. But Jesus was the Last Adam, in that He fulfilled the promises and prophecies of the Savior completely. He lived a sinless life and died for the sins of His people, just like Isaiah said he would. Then on the third day He was raised from the dead as a sign that God had accepted His sacrifice and all His claims about Himself were true.

If Christ was raised from the dead, that means that what He said about Scripture is true, and Jesus accepted every word. The rest of the New Testament which comes after the Gospels was written in light of the fact of the resurrection and tells Christians how we should live as we wait for His return, and Revelation tells us what will happen around the time of Christ’s return.

So you see, it’s impossible to take the Gospels as true, but not the rest of the Scriptures. It all stands or falls together. Now that we have that out of the way, let’s talk about the Assyrians.

I’m not sure why your friend thinks that 2 Kings 18–19 contradicts the account of the Assyrians themselves. The biblical account says that Hezekiah paid them off. Apparently that wasn’t enough to completely stop Sennacherib from attacking, but Assyria never claimed to defeat Jerusalem. And it is no surprise that Assyria told the story in a way that made them look better than they really were; that’s what all ancient cultures did. In fact, one of the things that makes the Bible a uniquely valuable historical resource is that it tells the less flattering details about Israel and its leaders.

Everywhere the Bible has been tested as to its historical reliability, it has been vindicated. The people, places, and events it describes have been shown to be true to the archaeological record. I believe the Bible is more than a good historical record, but it is certainly not less.

I hope this helps.

Published: 24 March 2018

Helpful Resources