Sweeter Than Honey: Delighting in God’s Word

Summary of my sermon, based on Psalm 19-7-11. Preached at Greenhills Christian Fellowship Peel on March 30, 2025.

Wes Huff’s appearance on the Joe Rogan podcast earlier this year was nothing short of remarkable. A Ph.D. student at Wycliffe College and part of Apologetics Canada, Wes went toe-to-toe with Joe Rogan for three hours, defending the Christian faith and clearly articulating the Gospel to an audience of millions. It’s hard to grasp the sheer size of that platform—over six million views on YouTube alone, and similar numbers on Spotify. To put it in perspective, that’s more than a hundred Skydomes full of people, all hearing a clear, thoughtful, and respectful explanation of the Christian faith. In a time when Christians have been increasingly mocked in the public square—like when Richard Dawkins told a crowd to “mock them, ridicule them, in public”—this was a powerful moment.

What made the interview even more compelling was the focus on one of the most commonly criticized aspects of Christianity: the reliability of the Bible. Critics like Dawkins often argue that the Bible can’t be trusted because we don’t have the original manuscripts and because the copies we do have contain hundreds of thousands of “errors.” That’s not something we need to deny—it’s true. We don’t have the originals. What we have are thousands of copies, and among those are an estimated 400,000 to 500,000 textual variants. That might sound alarming until you understand what those variants actually are and why they exist.

The truth is, most of those differences are tiny—spelling errors, word order changes, skipped or duplicated words. Back then, everything was copied by hand. Imagine trying to copy the entire Gospel of Mark by hand without making a single mistake. You’d probably miss a word or two. And yet, despite all that, none of these variants impact the core doctrines of our faith. The teachings about Jesus, the nature of God, salvation, and the Church remain absolutely intact. Even the few major variants—like the debated ending of Mark’s Gospel—are well documented and clearly noted in most Bibles today. They’re not hidden, and they don’t undermine the central truths of Christianity.

And here’s where things get even more fascinating. The reason we have so many variants is because we have so many manuscripts. Thousands of them. The New Testament is, by far, the best-attested work of ancient literature in human history. We have around 5,800 Greek manuscripts, and if you include Latin and other translations, that number climbs to about 24,000. By comparison, we have only 210 copies of Plato’s works, with the oldest one dating 1,300 years after the original was written. Homer’s Iliad has about 1,700 copies, and the oldest is from 400 years after the original. But with the New Testament, the earliest manuscript fragment—called P52—is from just 30 years after the Gospel of John was written. That’s extraordinary.

Wes Huff actually gave Joe Rogan a replica of P52 during the interview. It’s just a small scrap of papyrus with a few lines from John’s Gospel, but it’s hugely important because it helps scholars confirm the accuracy of other, later manuscripts. Think of it like polling a few thousand people to predict an election—the sample is small, but if it matches the broader data, you can trust the results. P52 isn’t alone, either. We have other early fragments like P104, a piece of Matthew’s Gospel dated to around 150 AD. Then there’s the Codex Sinaiticus, the oldest complete New Testament we have, from around 330 AD. Even that is only about 240 years removed from the originals, which is still incredibly close by ancient standards.

But all this evidence—the variants, the sheer volume of manuscripts, the early dating—it doesn’t just prove reliability. It also shows just how valued the Bible was. Psalm 19:7–8 says, “The law of the Lord is perfect, reviving the soul… the precepts of the Lord are right, rejoicing the heart… the commandment of the Lord is pure, enlightening the eyes.” That’s why there were so many copies. People wanted to read the Scriptures. They used them, shared them, traveled with them. Just like my old, worn-out Bible I carried with me during a summer at Capernwray Harbour—eventually it just fell apart from use. That’s likely what happened to the original writings of Paul, Peter, and the rest. They were passed around so much, used so heavily, they simply didn’t survive. But before they wore out, they were copied again and again.

Even Paul encouraged this. In Colossians 4:16, he tells the church, “Have this letter read also in the church of the Laodiceans.” The Word was meant to be shared. And God, in His wisdom, chose to preserve His Word not through a single pristine original locked away in a vault, but through an abundance of handwritten manuscripts, lovingly copied and spread across the ancient world. That’s not a weakness—it’s a miracle.

The Veracity of the Resurrection

Summary of my sermon, based on Luke 24:1-12. Preached at Greenhills Christian Fellowship Toronto on Easter Sunday – March 31, 2024.

As your pastor for the past year, I hope I’ve conveyed just how much I love the Bible. This love stems from a deep appreciation of its power to reveal God and communicate the Gospel, the way of salvation. However, my love for the Bible goes beyond this. I’m particularly passionate about Biblical Studies, one of the core academic disciplines in Christianity, alongside Church History and Systematic Theology.

Biblical Studies focuses on interpreting and applying Scripture, understanding the history of how the Bible was written, compiled, and passed down through generations. My passion for this discipline is evident in my participation in groups like “Nerdy Biblical Language Majors,” where we dive deep into the intricacies of biblical languages and texts.

But loving the Bible also requires understanding its role and nature. The Bible is the “Words of Life,” revealing God and declaring the Gospel. Yet, we must remember that the physical book itself is not intrinsically holy. Unlike some other religions that revere their scriptures to the point of idolatry, Christianity recognizes that the Bible is a historical artifact, a tool through which God reveals Himself.

The Bible’s physical form is not sacred. Many of us have old, worn-out Bibles sitting in our homes. The paper and ink are not what we worship; it’s the Word of God within those pages that matters. As 2 Timothy 3:16 (ESV) says, “All Scripture is breathed out by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness.”

This understanding doesn’t diminish the Bible’s importance. Instead, it emphasizes that the Bible is a living document, written by human authors under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit. As 2 Peter 1:21 (ESV) reminds us, “For no prophecy was ever produced by the will of man, but men spoke from God as they were carried along by the Holy Spirit.”

One of the challenges we face, particularly around Easter, is the attempt by some to discredit the Bible and the resurrection of Jesus. The media often airs documentaries that cast doubt on these events, presenting theories that Jesus didn’t really die, that His disciples hallucinated, or that the resurrection was faked. But this skepticism isn’t new; it dates back to the very first Easter.

In Matthew 28:11-15 (ESV), we read about the Roman and Jewish leaders spreading the lie that Jesus’ disciples stole His body. This attempt to undermine the resurrection has persisted through the centuries, but we have strong reasons to trust the Bible’s account.

Firstly, the New Testament was written soon after the events it describes. Matthew and Mark’s Gospels were penned around 50 A.D., less than 20 years after the resurrection. Luke wrote his Gospel around 60 A.D., after carefully gathering eyewitness testimonies. Even John’s Gospel, written between 80-90 A.D., was completed within a generation of the events it recounts. Compared to other ancient biographies, such as Plutarch’s “Life of Caesar,” written over 150 years after Caesar’s assassination, the New Testament is remarkably close to the events it describes.

Secondly, the sheer number of ancient copies of the New Testament underscores its reliability. We have over 5,600 Greek manuscripts of the New Testament, far surpassing the few copies of other ancient works like those of Plato or Julius Caesar. These manuscripts, some dating back to just 100 years after the originals, provide a strong foundation for the trustworthiness of the New Testament.

However, the Bible’s reliability goes beyond its historical accuracy. The Bible is living and active, as Hebrews 4:12 (ESV) says, “For the word of God is living and active, sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing to the division of soul and of spirit, of joints and of marrow, and discerning the thoughts and intentions of the heart.” It’s a document that has the power to change lives, not because of the paper it’s printed on, but because it contains the living Word of God.

The Bible’s truth is further affirmed by the fact that the first witnesses to the resurrection were women. In a society where women’s testimonies were often dismissed, the Gospel writers faithfully recorded that Mary Magdalene and other women were the first to discover the empty tomb. This detail, unlikely to be fabricated, points to the authenticity of the resurrection account.

Moreover, Jesus appeared to many others after His resurrection, as recounted in 1 Corinthians 15:5-8 (ESV): “He appeared to Cephas, then to the twelve. Then he appeared to more than five hundred brothers at one time, most of whom are still alive… Then he appeared to James, then to all the apostles. Last of all… he appeared also to me.”

Finally, the ultimate testament to the resurrection’s truth is the willingness of the early Christians to die for their faith. From Stephen’s martyrdom in Acts 7:58-60 (ESV) to the countless others who gave their lives, the early believers’ sacrifice underscores their unwavering belief in the risen Christ.

The Bible’s reliability as a historical document, combined with the testimony of those who lived and died for their faith, gives us confidence in the truth of the resurrection. As we continue to study and apply the Scriptures, let us remember that it is the living Word of God, powerful and transformative, guiding us in our walk with Christ.