The word Bible means "Book" and the word "Holy" means "separate". So
the Bible is separate from all other books. But you make ask, why is it
separate from all other books? Because it is God’s book. Its matter, its
purpose and its author are all different from all other books. If you go
to a library or a book store you are not going to find any other book
which comes close to the Bible.
The Bible itself is like a library; inside its covers are 66
individual books. 39 of these books are found in the Old Testament and
27 in the New Testament. God directed the recording of the Bible. Its
ideas, doctrines and events all came from Him. God employed writers to
do the actual work of writing the Bible.
The books were written by over 40 "authors". They came from every
walk of life (kings, priests, scholars, shepherds, fisherman) and they
lived in many different countries (Syria, Arabia, Italy, Greece,
Babylon, Palestine) and they wrote at widely separated intervals of
time. The writers wrote over a period of between 1,500 and 1,600 years.
Harmony in the Bible

Let’s pretend for a minute that you were a blind person and someone
kindly offered to take you to the concert hall in your city to hear your
cities symphony orchestra. You arrive at the concert hall and proceed to
listen to this magnificent music. Half way
through the evening’s program
there is intermission. During intermission, the man in the seat next to
you realises you are blind and leans over and tells you that the
orchestra had been playing without a conductor. Would you believe him?
Of course you wouldn’t! Even if you can’t see the orchestra you know
that the conductor must be present, you can tell this from the beautiful
way the orchestra is playing. Harmony between the different components
of the orchestra doesn’t just happen – there must be a conductor to
create it.
The same idea applies to the Bible. In the Bible there are sixty-six
books, by about forty different authors, written over a period of about
1,500 years. Yet despite this, the harmony running through the Bible is
exceptional. If you look at all the books you will see that they all
teach the same great principles about life and death, sin and salvation.
From the first verse of the first book of the Bible through to the last
verse of the last book of the Bible there is a one consistent story
which steadily unfolds:
God has a plan for the earth and the human race and He will see it
slowly but surely come to completion.
Harmony doesn’t just happen. If the members of the orchestra are
playing well together then it can only be because of the conductor
standing at the front of them. In the same way the Bible is consistent
all the way through because of the great creator God who designed it
that way.
The contents of the Bible – God’s message always at the forefront
When you look through the pages of the Bible at the sort of topics it
covers you will notice one thing. God is always kept to the forefront
and there is a suppression of things that are of mere human interest.
Some passages of the Bible which you read seem to be of little
interest beyond describing some historical event that took place. But I
guarantee if you look deeper you will find that it has some deeper
spiritual meaning or it is connected with some other important event. In
other words, you can learn something from every chapter in the Bible.
But what about chapters of the Bible which contain, for example,
Genealogy. Genealogy is a list of a particular man and the names of his
children, and the names of their children, etc. It is sort of like a
description of someone’s family tree. You can see an example of a
Genealogy in Matthew chapter one and verses one to seventeen.
I remember being told a story about a genealogy: an old and wise man
said that there is a message to be learnt in every chapter and passage
of the Bible. A young man (trying to be clever!) got up and said that
his statement wasn’t quite correct about every chapter and passage
containing a lesson for us to learn and he then pointed to a chapter
full of genealogy – which had nothing but a list of names. The older man
then proceeded to go through that chapter showing how this man was a
great man of faith and that man had shown great courage and this man had
truly loved the lord and so on for the next half hour. He pointed out
that this wasn’t a stale list of names but rather a list of great men
who we should fashion our own lives after!
The younger man sat down quite embarrassed….
The contents of the Bible – a conciseness throughout its entire
length
There is a conciseness in the words so that matters of importance are
not lost in a multitude of words. There is 602 thousand words in the old
testament and a 170 thousand words in the new testament, that’s getting
up to almost 800,000 words in the whole of the Bible. That’s a lot of
words and you can imagine that any messages in there could easily get
buried by the sheer weight of words and verses. Yet despite this size,
God’s messages clearly come out at you and you go away having learnt
something every time you read the Bible.
The contents of the Bible – moral purity throughout its pages
The Bible is continually morally pure in its teachings and encourages
over and over that the reader’s thought and conduct be morally pure. Sin
is always repulsed.
The contents of the Bible – impartiality from start to finish
There is always impartiality in its pages. In other words, it is not
biased towards a particular person. For example, the well-known Bible
character King David is described as a "man after God’s own heart", yet
his sins are not hidden. There laid out in the pages of the Bible for
everyone to read.
The contents of the Bible – written with majesty and dignity
There is a certain majesty and dignity in the Bible which is not
found in the writings of humans. When you have some time read chapter 40
and chapter 53 from the book of Isaiah – you will see what I mean.
Summary
So we have looked at the first reason why you should believe the
Bible. Despite containing 66 books, being written over a 1500 year span,
by 40 different authors, in different locations and on separate
continents, in three different languages, covering diverse subject
matters at different points in history – despite all this – it has a
harmony and consistency from the first word through to the last word.
We also saw that the Bible is special and unique by looking at its
content – the nature and style of the book. If the Bible was written by
man the qualities mentioned in this article would be missing. Essential
parts would be left out and immaterial parts would be inserted. The
record of human failure and sin would be biased in one way or another.
Mere political gossip of the age would be included and there would be
bias and misrepresentation.
Such writing would be unreliable for those who believe in God.

