Opinion Yes, The Bible can be regarded as infallible since it is inspired by God and has been remarkably preserved largely intact over the years. The alleged errors and inconsistencies do not stand up to the scrutiny of context, logic, archaelogical or scientific discoveries, or study of the original language used.
Some religions teach that it is, but others do not. If you belong to certain conservative religions that follow a fundamentalist or literalist tradition (Evangelical Baptists, for example), they believe the Bible is the inspired word of God and is thus totally true and infallible in all things. But not everyone belongs to those religious traditions. Many people believe the Bible contains religious truth (for example, the New Testament teaches that Jesus was the messiah, and the Gospels provide the basic beliefs that Christians follow) -- but it may not contain historical truth (the New Testament was written between 50-150 years after Jesus died, and he himself left no writings, so over the years, his followers might have gotten certain historical details wrong). Other people believe the Bible is a collection of moral stories meant to provide us with a guide for living a good life; they also believe it is worth knowing about because so much literature and art has been influenced by those stories. But then, there are the skeptics-- atheists, agnostics, humanists, and others who do not believe in any organized religion: for them, the Bible is nothing more than an assortment of myths and fables. So, depending on your religious background, you may have been taught that the Bible cannot be questioned-- however, not everyone comes from that tradition.
No, the Bible is not infallible. As archaeologists, historians and linguists have demonstrated, there are too many inconsistencies and historical errors for it to be infallible. Moreover, some of the books of the Bible had large parts added, rewritten or removed long after the book was first written. This means that the Bible is not infallible.
A biblical literalist regards the Bible as infallible and without error. Any apparent errors and inconsistencies can and must be explained away, because the Bible is the Word of God.
Some believe that the Bible is the word of God because it was literally told to the authors by God himself, and therefore is infallible. Others believe that the Bible is the word of God because it was inspired by God, although the books were the work of men, and although it can contain errors of history and science, it is infallible on matters of faith.
Some who believe that the Bible is the word of God say it was literally told to the authors by God himself, and therefore is infallible. Others believe that the Bible was inspired by God and, although it can contain errors of history and science, it is infallible on matters of faith. There is no evidence of either, so neither view can be be put forward as more correct than the other.
For Bible literalists, the Bible is entirely true and inerrant. However, even many Christians recognise that a book with so many contradictions and historical erros can not be regarded as literally the word of truth. They regard it as inspired, rather than infallible.
God's 'righteousness' speaks more of His justice, acts and judgments - His holiness in action via His righteousness reflecting His perfect character.
The Gideons believe that the Bible is the inspired, infallible, inerrant word of God.
Some believe that the Bible is the word of God because it was literally told to the authors by God himself, and therefore is infallible. Others believe that the Bible was inspired by God and, although it can contain errors of history and science, it is infallible on matters of faith. There is no evidence of either. The Bible contains many errors of history and science, and is therefore not infallible. It contains many contradictions and inconsistencies on theology, and is therefore not even infallible on matters of faith.
A biblical literalist regards the Bible as infallible and without error. Any apparent errors and inconsistencies can and must be explained away, because the Bible is the Word of God.
Some believe that the Bible is the word of God because it was literally told to the authors by God himself, and therefore is infallible. Others believe that the Bible is the word of God because it was inspired by God, although the books were the work of men, and although it can contain errors of history and science, it is infallible on matters of faith.
Yes, when you are writing about "the Bible" Bible is always capitalized.The word bible can be used other ways, any book considered an infallible or very reliable guide to some activity may be called a "bible."-- the gardener's bible
Yes, the Catechism of the Council of Trent, also known as the Roman Catechism, is considered authoritative and reliable teaching by the Catholic Church, but it is not considered infallible in the same way that papal or conciliar pronouncements are. It does provide a comprehensive and orthodox presentation of Catholic doctrine.
Some who believe that the Bible is the word of God say it was literally told to the authors by God himself, and therefore is infallible. Others believe that the Bible was inspired by God and, although it can contain errors of history and science, it is infallible on matters of faith. There is no evidence of either, so neither view can be be put forward as more correct than the other.
In is the prefix for infallible.
Some believe that the Bible is the word of God because it was literally told to the authors by God himself, and therefore is infallible. Others believe that the Bible was inspired by God and, although it can contain errors of history and science, it is infallible on matters of faith. There is no evidence of either. The Bible contains many errors of history and science, and is therefore not infallible. It contains many contradictions and inconsistencies on theology, and is therefore not even infallible on matters of faith.
I am always right, I am infallible.
I am infallible because I am good at softball.
For Bible literalists, the Bible is entirely true and inerrant. However, even many Christians recognise that a book with so many contradictions and historical erros can not be regarded as literally the word of truth. They regard it as inspired, rather than infallible.