Yahuah's Supernatural Word
Yahuah's Supernatural Word
Yahuah's Supernatural Word
There is much that even a superficial examiner will discover about the Scripture that
recommends it as the true, timeless revelation of Yahuah to man. The Scripture succinctly
addresses both origins and future events, credibly answering the three greatest questions
(whence? whither? and wherefore?). It marshals the full contingent of rhetorical instruments into
a single message: poetry, philosophy, pithy proverbs, parables, prophecy, and poignant historical
narratives alike speak in a compelling manner. The pathos of the crucifixion account is an event
worthy of being the pinnacle of world history, that Omnipotence would submit to death at the
hands of his own creation! The resurrection of the founder and the message of salvation by faith
apart from human works stand in stark contrast to every other religious system known. But to
fully appreciate the weight of the evidence, one must dig deeper than this. There are several lines
of reasoning that give testimony to the fact that the Scripture is the Word of Yahuah. They can be
generally grouped into five broad topics, each of which deserves a great deal more attention than
is currently given here. For further information, Josh McDowell\rquote s book Evidence That
Demands a Verdict is a good resource.
First, let us consider the uniqueness of the book. The Scripture is unique in preparation,
circulation, translation, and preservation. The Scripture was written over a period of 1,500 years
by a great variety of men who were inspired of Yahuah. From the king of Babylon writing in
Chaldean to the humble prophet of Samaria; from an educated doctor writing in Greek to the
beautiful lyrics composed by a Hebrew shepherd in the field; from a statesman born in ancient
Egypt to a fisherman of the Roman era; it is difficult to conceive of a more diverse group!
Writing any volume of such length and being in complete harmony would indeed be a wonder,
much less dealing with a topic so controversial as religion. No book in the history of the world
has been as widely circulated as the scripture. Every year it outsells all of the top best-sellers and
it has now been translated into over 1,200 different languages. Despite the hammers of higher
criticism and the black-listing of dictators, the anvil of Yahuah\rquote s Word survives after the
hammers wear out. Discoveries of hundreds of copies of the ancient texts from a millennium
before Messiah reveal the remarkable preservation of the message throughout time. The Scripture
is also unique in message and influence. The Scripture unequivocally claims to be the word of
Yahuah (II Timothy 3:16, II Peter 1:16-21). Either it satisfies that claim or it is not a "good
book." From beginning to end the Scripture carries a message of the Messiah, Yahuah in the
flesh. C.S. Lewis effectively countered the myth of Yahushuah Messiah being merely a "good
man." Messiah claimed to be Yahuah. So either He was divine, or he was a deceitful impostor, or
he was pathetically self-deluded. This has been called the Lord/Liar/Lunatic trilemma. Great men
the world over have sought to plummet the message of the scriptures. From common people with
no formal education to the brightest minds in the scientific world, most have found intellectual
challenge and many have come to know spiritual fulfillment in the message of this unique book.
Biblical prophecies with regard to ancient cities are equally remarkable. Skeptics have
suggested that a message of impending doom spoken against an ancient city must come true
eventually. Yet the dire predictions in the Scripture are very specific such that the details of one
city\rquote s prophecies do not fit the next one. The detailed prophecies involving ancient cities
include Babylon, Chorazin-Bethsaida-Capernaum, Gaza-Ashkelon, Jerusalem, Moab-Ammon,
Nineveh, Petra-Edom, Samaria, Sidon, Thebes-Memphis, Tyre, and others (McDowell, 1991).
Contemplate just a few of them.
Among the several specific predictions with regard to ancient Edom are those in Ezekiel
25:13-14. It claims that Edom\rquote s destruction would leave the land desolate as far as
Teman and that Israel would participate in their destruction. In Ezekiel 35:7 the prophet
further notes Edom would no longer be a place of merchants and trade. Isaiah 34:14-15
claims it would be the habitation of wild animals. Lastly Jeremiah 49:18 predicts that it
would never be inhabited again. This is a daunting series of prophecies, particularly when
one considers that Petra, the capital of Edom, was one of the wonders of the ancient
world--literally a city carved into a mountain and the Jews were in bondage when the
prophecy was made! Yet under the Maccabean era the resurgent Israelites pillaged Edom.
In dramatic fulfillment the Edomite Empire was finally destroyed right up to the city of
Teman. (Only Teman, or Maan was left and survives still today.) When the capital city of
Petra was rediscovered (to the chagrin of critics who maintained that the Edomite
civilization was mythical), it was found to be a ghost town, inhabited only by eagles,
scorpions and other wild creatures.
By way of contrast, one can consider the prophecies against Moab and Ammon. Though
in Ezekiel 25:3-4 the prophet had predicted the fall of these city-states, Jeremiah 48:47 (Moab)
and 49:6 (Ammon) predicted that they would rise again. Indeed these cities are in existence and
thriving today.
The story of ancient Tyre is given in Unger\rquote s Scripture Dictionary: "an ancient
Phoenician city, located on the shore of the Mediterranean\par
Sea... It once consisted of two parts--a rocky coast defense of great strength on the mainland, and
a city upon a small but well-protected island about half a mile from the shore." A merchant
nation, the mariners of Tyre traveled the known world, making their home a successful trade port
with a great, walled city on the mainland and a wealthy enclave on the island. In Ezekiel 26 the
prophet details the destruction that will befall Tyre. Let us note the specificity: \par
(1) vs 3 claims that multiple nations would be involved; (2) vs 4 tells that the walls and towers
were to be broken down; (3) vs 4 states that the dirt was to be scraped off the area revealing the
underlying rock and (4) All the debris of the city was to be dumped in the water; (5) vs 7-11 tell
that Nebuchanezzar would break into the city; (6) vs 14 predicts that it would become a place of
fishermen spreading their nets and (7) that the site would never be rebuilt. Nebuchanezzar
attempted to subdue proud Tyre but because the inhabitants of this seacoast city all abandoned
Tyre proper to escape to the large island fortress off the coast, he never looted its treasury or
conquered its royalty. Nevertheless, Nebuchanezzar's siege and destruction of the seacoast city
was praised and actually rewarded by Yahuah (Ezekiel 29:18-20). His destruction of the
mainland portion of Tyre certainly fulfills verses 7-11 which apply to him. The dramatic
fulfillment of the prophesied judgment was not completed in Nebuchanezzar since the
inhabitants outlasted him on their Alcatraz-like island. When Alexander the Great came through
to conquer Tyre, the citizens tried the same trick...evacuating for the island fortress. Alexander
took a cue from the failure of Nebuchanezzar. He took ALL of the debris from the city of Tyre
(literally scraping it bare), built a causeway out to the island, and proceeded to demolish it,
selling the surviving inhabitants into slavery. Attempts were made to rebuild Tyre and it was
again destroyed. The modern city called Tyre was NOT constructed on the ancient mainland site.
In fact the ancient plot is largely barren rock (somewhere inland from the modern construction),
and has quite literally been used by local fishermen to lay out their nets! "If Ezekiel had looked at
Tyre in his day and had made these seven predictions in human wisdom, these estimates mean
that there would have been only one chance in 75,000,000 of their all coming true. They all came
true in the minutest detail." (Stoner, Peter, Science Speaks, 1963, p. 80.)
A most remarkable Old Testament prophecy has been fulfilled in the modern era. In
keeping with the warning of Leviticus 26:33 and Deuteronomy 28:64 the children of Israel were
scattered and tormented. From the destruction of Jerusalem in A.D. 70, to their banishment from
Rome, to the pogroms of eastern Europe, to the holocaust; the Jewish people have suffered
greatly. But Ezekiel 36:33-35 and 38:8 makes it very clear that the Jews were to return out of the
other nations, rebuild their wasted cities, and recultivate their land (See also Jeremiah 6:14-15). It
would seem highly unlikely that the Jews would remain distinct as a people, having no country
and every motivation to intermarry and escape the stigma. Yet this Biblical prophecy has been
completely fulfilled in recent history. From a population of only 20,000 identifiable Palestinian
Jews in 1900, the modern reemergence of the Israeli nation has swelled that number to 6 million
Jews. No other nation has been similarly reborn. Small wonder when the rationalist king
Frederick the Great demanded of the court chaplain an unanswerable proof of the
Scripture\rquote s authenticity, the answer was given: "the Jew, your majesty!" Interestingly,
even the advent of the modern skeptical era with a worldview based upon uniformitarianism was
foretold in the scriptures (see II Peter 3:3-7). In Isaiah 41:23 the prophet lays out a challenge:
"Show me the things that are to come hereafter, that we may know that you are Yahuahs." The
Yahuah of the Scripture has dramatically met that challenge!
Fourthly, there is the fact that the Scripture is scientifically accurate. One must always be
cautious against using circular reasoning such that scientific theories are enlightened by the
scripture and then those theories are used to show that the scriptures are reliable. But quite aside
from the evidence for controversial theories like special creation, or the co-existence of men and
dinosaurs; there are a number of rather startling statements in the Scripture which appear to be
far more advanced than the scientific knowledge at the time of writing. Moreover, there has
never been an irreconcilable discrepancy between scientific facts or laws and the scriptures.
* Jeremiah 33:22 claims that the stars of the heaven are innumerable.
Hippocrates, before the invention of the telescope charted and numbered 1,022 stars. Kepler later
recounted and revised the number. Today scientists agree with Jeremiah. There are billions just
in our galaxy!
* Psalm 135:5-7 How do the rain drops stay small (discrete even in a strong wind)? One
of the reasons is found in these verses. Because of the electrical charges in the clouds, the rain
drops repel each other as they fall. This is why electrical static during a rain or snow storm can
interrupt transmissions.
* Ezekiel 5:5, 38:12 claims that Jerusalem is the center of the earth.
ICR commissioned a computer analysis of the earth\rquote s land-masses and discovered that the
geographic center is in Palestine, near the holy city.
*Psalm 103:12 The Psalmist seeks to describe how far away Yahuah has removed the
sins of those who have been forgiven. Interestingly, one can go west or east forever, unlike north
and south.
* Hebrews 1:11-12 describes the wearing down of the creation in language that nicely
mirrors the second law of thermodynamics and II Peter 3:12 describes the heavens one day
passing away in a fire that causes the elements to melt in fervent heat (a pretty accurate
description of nuclear meltdown).
* Ecclesiastes 1:4-7 describes the whirling motion of the winds and the movement of
storm fronts long before the advent of modern meteorology.
* Job 37:16 also gives significant meteorological information, including the balancing of
the vapors in the clouds. Job 36:27 adds that the quantity of the rain is proportional to the amount
of vapor aloft.
* Job 26:7 The ancients Greeks believed that the world was held up by Atlas. Other
civilizations held similar ideas. The Scripture made an unusual claim: Yahuah did not hang the
world on anything.
* Psalm 8:8 discusses the "paths of the seas." The story is told that when the man we call
"the Father of Oceanography," Matthew Fontain Maury, read Psalm 8 the aforementioned phrase
stuck in his mind. He later sought to confirm the idea and eventually wrote The Physical
Geography of the Sea in 1855. It was the first textbook on modern oceanography. The state of
Virginia erected a memorial to him that cites this passage.
* Isaiah 40:12 Some have claimed that the Scripture supports the "flat earth theory." But
this passage declares that Yahuah sits upon the "circle of the earth."
* Job 38:13-14 conveys the idea of the earth rotating on its axis: "the earth...is turned as
clay to the seal."
* One of the directors of Standard Oil Company read in Exodus 2:3 how Moses was
placed in an ark "daubed with slime and pitch." He sent the company geologist Charles Whitshott
to determine if there was still oil in that region. The discovery of oil led to Standard having very
successful well operations in Egypt. (Tan, Paul L., Encyclopedia of 7700 Illustrations, p. 191.)
* The practice of medical bleeding as a treatment (often with leeches) was common until
the middle of the 19th century. Historians believe that George Washinton's bleeding caused his
death. (Thayer, William R., George Washington, 1922, p. 240) Ironically, by his bedside was a
Scripture that stated in Leviticus 17:11 "For the life of the flesh is in the blood."
* Linguists have determined that all the earth's peoples must have originally shared a
common language. That is precisely what the Scripture declares in Genesis 11:1.
* In Job 38:16 Yahuah challenges Job to find the "springs of the sea."
These fresh water fountains emerging from the deep ocean floor have only been located in recent
decades.
The fifth area of evidence is the demonstration of changed lives. That is, there is power in
the Messianic experience, power in the Messianic story, and power in the Messianic\rquote s
departure. If the Scripture only impacted a relative few in a single culture, one might be skeptical
of its claims. But the message of salvation and reconciliation to the Creator has dramatically
changed women and men of all ages and races throughout history. The message of the scripture is
the highest of drama: the eternal omnipotent Yahuah pursuing the wayward creation to the extent
of a humble birth and cruel, ignominious death. It is at once exquisitely mind-boggling and yet so
simple that a child can understand and be affected by it. Millions of people from around the
world can personalize the testimony of John Newton, the profane slave-trader turned Messianic:
"Amazing grace, how sweet the sound that saved a wretch like me! I once was lost, but now am
found--was blind, but now I see!" A number of books have compiled death bed accounts, giving
the stories of both saved and unsaved people passing from this earth as told in the words of
eye-witnesses. One such book is Voices from the Edge of Eternity by John Meyers. The impact
grows as one perceives the remarkable similarity in so many of the accounts. Messianics see
great brightness, give lucid accounts of observing loved ones and leave their bodies with great
hope and comfort. But heart-rending accounts of the passing of many unsaved souls are also
given. It recounts the details of the great French skeptic Voltaire\rquote s passing from this life in
the most awful of circumstance, crying out in darkness, hopelessness and despair. Even his nurse
repeatedly said that for all the wealth of Europe, she would not see another infidel die! Hebrews
10:31 states, "It is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living Yahuah."
If the Scripture gives evidence of being the word of Yahuah and it is reliable when it
speaks historically, prophetically, etc.; than it is also likely to be trustworthy when it speaks
theologically and gives the simple plan of salvation as follows...
You are a sinner. (Romans 3:23 "For all have sinned and come short of the glory of
Yahuah.") The penalty for sin is eternal death, separation from Yahuah. (Romans 6:23 "For the
wages of sin is death, but the gift of Yahuah is eternal life through Yahushuah Messiah our
Elohim.") Messiah died as a substitute, paying your penalty (Romans 5:8 "But Yahuah showed
His love toward us, in that, while we were yet sinners Messiah died for us.") If you repent and
call upon Yahushuah to save you, He promises you eternal life as a free gift. (Romans 10:13 "For
whosoever shall call upon the name of the Elohim, Yahuah shall be saved.") The Scripture is
very clear in making an exclusive claim on the path to Yahuah. "He that believes on the Son has
everlasting life; but he that believes not the Son shall not see life; but the wrath of Yahuah abides
on him". (John 3:36) "Yahushuah said unto him, I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man
comes unto the Father, but by me" (John 14:6). Let us know if you would like more information
about Yahuah\rquote s simple plan of salvation or how to live in a way pleasing to your Creator.