If Scripture is not inerrant, then who gets to decide what part of it is true?
This is not a scare tactic. It’s a question of theological method. And one the modern church rarely slows down to ask.
The debate over inerrancy is often portrayed as academic, antiquated, or unnecessary. “Why fight over a word?” some say. “Let’s just focus on Jesus.” But this kind of thinking reveals a dangerous trend: we’ve grown far too comfortable placing Scripture under human evaluation rather than the other way around.
And the moment Scripture becomes suspect, everything becomes negotiable.
Continue reading “The Hidden Cost of Losing Inerrancy”
