The Domino Theory of Scripture teaches that seekers face a stark choice: either they accept the doctrine of biblical inerrancy or they have no grounds for accepting the Bible and its Gospel as their authority for faith and life and as their guidebook to salvation. This position is based on the problem of the slippery slope: Fundamentalists argue that once one text is deemed erroneous (historically, scientifically, ethically, theologically, or as a contradiction of other biblical texts), this verdict calls into question the reliability of all biblical revelation, including its way of salvation. I know several honest intelligent believers who, faced with this stark choice, felt compelled by their integrity to renounce the authority of Scripture and their faith in its Gospel. These "apostates" include ex-Christians I know who were gloriously saved as young men. So here are the 5 questions for discussion on this thread:
(1) Is the insistence on an inerrantist view of Scripture essential enough to thereby unwittingly encourage honest dissenters to renounce their faith in biblical revelation and its Gospel?
(2) Why do Fundamentalists insist on biblical inerrancy when the Bible itself never claims to be inerrannt, not even in the vague claim that the OT is "god--breathed (2 Timothy 3:16)?"
(3) On what basis do Fundamentalists claim an inerrant NT, when the NT didn't even exist as a consensual canon of books until the 3rd century? [No, 2 Peter 3:15-16 does not refute this problem.]
(4) Jude cites the alleged supernatural revelation in 1 Enoch and the Assumption of Moses as authoritative and In 1 Corinthians 2:9 Paul quotes the Apocalypse of Elijah with the same phrase ("It is written") that he uses to cite OT texts. So on what basis do Fundamentalists accept the Protestant OT canon (despite Josephus) as opposed to Paul's and Jude's apparently open-ended view of canonicity, the Septuagint, and the Catholic inclusion of the OT apocrypha?
(5) How is it intellectually honest for Fundamentalists to continue to cling to biblical inerrancy, when faced with clear examples of biblical errors for which they have no rational answer?
(1) Is the insistence on an inerrantist view of Scripture essential enough to thereby unwittingly encourage honest dissenters to renounce their faith in biblical revelation and its Gospel?
(2) Why do Fundamentalists insist on biblical inerrancy when the Bible itself never claims to be inerrannt, not even in the vague claim that the OT is "god--breathed (2 Timothy 3:16)?"
(3) On what basis do Fundamentalists claim an inerrant NT, when the NT didn't even exist as a consensual canon of books until the 3rd century? [No, 2 Peter 3:15-16 does not refute this problem.]
(4) Jude cites the alleged supernatural revelation in 1 Enoch and the Assumption of Moses as authoritative and In 1 Corinthians 2:9 Paul quotes the Apocalypse of Elijah with the same phrase ("It is written") that he uses to cite OT texts. So on what basis do Fundamentalists accept the Protestant OT canon (despite Josephus) as opposed to Paul's and Jude's apparently open-ended view of canonicity, the Septuagint, and the Catholic inclusion of the OT apocrypha?
(5) How is it intellectually honest for Fundamentalists to continue to cling to biblical inerrancy, when faced with clear examples of biblical errors for which they have no rational answer?