top of page

Scripture Is the Living Word of God: Why the Bible Bears God’s Authority

Based on the Bible Message Is the Bible Really the Living Word of God? by Scott Mitchell – Unlock the Bible Now!



A modern person surrounded by floating phones, news screens, social media feeds, and glowing data streams, all blurred and chaotic.

Scripture Is the Living Word of God


The question is straightforward and worth answering carefully: Is the Bible truly the Word of God, and on what basis can we say so? Scripture does not ask to be treated as a religious artifact or a collection of helpful thoughts. It presents itself as God’s own testimony—spoken, preserved, and written for our instruction. If Scripture is not the Word of God, then the gospel we believe has no fixed anchor. If it is, then it carries authority, clarity, and power to save.


The focus keyword, Scripture is the living Word of God, is not a slogan here. It is a conclusion drawn from the testimony of Christ, the apostles, and the nature of revelation itself.



Jesus Christ and the Word of God


John opens his Gospel with a declaration that leaves no room for ambiguity: “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.” The Word was not an idea or a force. The Word became flesh. Jesus Christ is God manifested, the Creator entering His creation.


That truth is essential. Christ is the Word of God in person. Yet Jesus also spoke plainly about the written Scriptures. In John 10, He joined these two realities together when He said, “the scripture cannot be broken,” while referring to those to whom “the word of God came.” In other words, Jesus did not set God’s spoken Word against God’s written Word. He treated Scripture as God’s own Word, binding and authoritative.


Scripture Is the Living Word of God-The Word Written and the Word Incarnate

Christ fulfilled what was written. After His resurrection, He opened the disciples’ understanding “that they might understand the scriptures” and said, “Thus it is written.” He grounded the facts of His death and resurrection in what had already been recorded. If Scripture were not truly God’s Word, there would be no reason for the Son of God to place such weight on what “is written.”



Logos and Scripture: Not Rivals, But United


Some try to separate the Greek term logos (word) from graphē (scripture), as though God’s Word could exist in authority apart from what is written. The New Testament does not support that divide.


Logos can mean speech, message, or expression. Graphē refers to the written record. They are different words, but they are not opposing categories. When God speaks, and His words are recorded, those words become Scripture. Jesus Himself treated them that way. The apostles did the same.


Peter made this point with unusual clarity. He said that even the voice he heard on the Mount of Transfiguration was not as sure as “a more sure word of prophecy”—and then identified that certainty with Scripture. The written Word, given by God, stands as the stable measure by which all claims of revelation are tested. 


Scripture Is the Living Word of God-Why Certainty Requires Scripture

If every claim of a “word from God” stood alone, there would be no final authority. Scripture gives us that standard. It is the preserved record of what God has said, and it is how truth is distinguished from error. That is why believers are told to compare spiritual things with spiritual—Scripture with Scripture.



All Scripture Is God-Breathed


Paul told Timothy, “All scripture is given by inspiration of God.” The word “inspiration” means God-breathed. God spoke, and His words were recorded. Scripture did not originate in human will. Holy men of God spoke as they were moved by the Holy Ghost.


Because of that, Scripture is profitable—for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, and for instruction in righteousness. It equips the believer. It matures the believer. If Scripture were merely human reflection about God, it could not do that work with divine authority.


The same apostle who received direct revelation from Christ still pointed people back to the Scriptures. He preached that Christ died for our sins and rose again “according to the scriptures.” The gospel that saves is not floating in the air. It is written, preserved, and preached from the Word of God.



God Preserves His Words


Psalm 12 declares that the words of the Lord are pure and that God will preserve them. Preservation matters. Ideas can be distorted. Testimony can be corrupted. But God’s written Word stands as a witness across generations.


This explains why attacks are aimed at Scripture. The serpent’s first question was, “Yea, hath God said?” Doubt is always aimed at what God has spoken and what He has preserved. Jesus, however, treated Scripture as unbreakable. The apostles treated it as authoritative. The church has always been called to test every spirit by it.



The Berean Pattern: Test Everything by Scripture


In Acts 17, the Bereans were called noble because they searched the Scriptures daily to see whether what they heard was true. They did not measure Scripture by preaching. They measured preaching by Scripture.


That pattern still stands. Claims, experiences, and teachings are not the standard. The Word of God is. If Scripture is the living Word of God, then it must remain the final court of appeal in matters of truth.



The Gospel Lives Because the Word Lives


No one is saved by an unwritten idea. We are saved by believing a gospel that has been preached from the Scriptures: Christ died for our sins, was buried, and rose again the third day according to the Scriptures. Those words are recorded. They are preserved. They are proclaimed.


Jesus said, “I am the way, the truth, and the life.” Those words were spoken, and they were written. The written record does not compete with the living Christ. It testifies of Him. It is how God continues to speak with clarity and authority.



Conclusion: Scripture Is the Living Word of God


If God is the living Word, then His Word, preserved in Scripture, is living in its power and effect. It convicts. It teaches. It corrects. It leads sinners to Christ. It builds believers in truth.


To doubt Scripture is to cut the nerve of certainty. To trust Scripture is to stand on what God has spoken and preserved. The Bible does not need to be rescued by human reasoning. It stands because God stands behind it.


Scripture is the living Word of God—not as a slogan, but as a reality proven by Christ, affirmed by the apostles, and experienced by every person who has come to saving faith through the gospel written on its pages.



Comments

Rated 0 out of 5 stars.
No ratings yet

Add a rating
bottom of page