
2 Timothy 3.16.
In pretty much every sermon and lesson I’ve heard about why we have a bible, and what the bible is for, preachers and teachers quote this verse. Which I’m gonna quote in the New International Version, because of the unique and very popular way they translate it.
2 Timothy 3.16-17 NIV - 16 All Scripture is God-breathed and is useful for teaching, rebuking, correcting and training in righteousness, 17 so that the servant of God may be thoroughly equipped for every good work.
The
And sometimes these folks take this idea too far, and claim God’s in them, and
But as for what its purpose actually is—well that’s the other reason people quote
- TEACHING (Greek
διδασκαλίαν /didaskalían, “instruction”;KJV “doctrine”). Informing Christians what we should know about God, and how to follow Jesus. - REBUKING (
ἐλεγμόν /elegmón; in the Textus Receptusἔλεγχον /élenhon; both mean “disprove, reprimand, convince otherwise”). Challenging Christians who get God wrong, go too far, or sin. - CORRECTING (
ἐπανόρθωσιν /epanórthosin, “correcting.”) Correcting Christians who lose focus, get off track, or forget what’s important. “Rebuking” deals with Christians who are seriously wrong; “correcting” with Christians who are just a bit off course. - TRAINING IN RIGHTEOUSNESS (
παιδείαν τὴν ἐν δικαιοσύνῃ /pedeían tin en dikeosýni, “training about the right [way]”). Not just classroom instruction, but hands-on demonstration about how to fairly and morally treat others and behave.
They won’t always interpret these words the same way I have. I’ve been to churches where the main focus is correction. You don’t know the proper bible
But okay, those four things sound like really good reasons to study a bible. Thing is, they’re missing the most important one. Because they’re not