Like many others who profess faith in Christ while compromising God’s Word, Dr. Enns does let us know in his book that he believes that Jesus Christ is the Son of God come in the flesh, that Jesus died for us on the Cross, and that He rose from the dead. Creeping CompromisesĪs I read The Bible Tells Me So and thought of how to review it fairly and honestly, I knew I would receive some letters from fellow Christians exhorting me to be less critical of our brother in Christ. He does this by sharing, in a conversational, lighthearted style, why he believes right-thinking people should simply discard the history presented in the Bible by relegating it to the status of Israel’s national myth. Enns through this book continues his destructive influence on the faith and biblical understanding of countless children and adults. As a Bible teacher at Eastern University and a producer of homeschool Bible curriculum, Dr. Peter Enns that effectively mocks it in its title: The Bible Tells Me So: Why Defending Scripture Has Made Us Unable to Read It. That biblical truth is under attack in a book by Dr. It comes right after “Jesus loves me! This I know” and right before “Little ones to Him belong they are weak but He is strong.” The familiar hymn, written in 1860 to comfort a dying child, has brought assurance to countless children and adults through its reminder that what we know of Jesus’ never-failing love and grace comes to us through the reliable testimony of God’s Word. “The Bible tells me so” is a familiar phrase.
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