What is Truth?

God, Christianity, the Bible, and You

Brian Tubbs
During the course of his questioning Jesus of Nazareth, Pontius Pilate asked one of the most enduring questions in human history. "What is truth?" asked the Roman governor, according to the Gospel of John, just before yielding to mob demands to have Jesus crucified.

Philosophers, theologians, and social commentators have long wrestled with the subject of truth. Over the centuries, different theories have arisen as to how one should approach the subject of truth, including how and whether it's possible to define it.

The famous philosopher Plato once said: "The philosopher is in love with truth, that is, not with the changing world of sensation, which is the object of opinion, but with the unchanging reality which is the object of knowledge."

A rational, sane observation of the world around us should demonstrate rather convincingly Plato's wisdom. There are such things as facts. In the field of science, there are laws. It should come as no surprise then that there are truths concerning human relations, religion, and society.

Unfortunately, in our modern age, people tend to reject the idea of external, objective truth - particularly if they feel obligated to abide by it. According to a 2000 Barna Research Group poll, only 38% of adult Americans believe that absolute truth exists.

Most people prefer to determine their own value system - their own concept of moral truths. But the late John Paul II insightfully warned: "Truth is not the fruit of one's imagination." Put another way: A person really, really wanting something to be true does NOT make it true.

Moreover, the fact that we might have company in believing something to be true or morally right does not make it so. Leo Tolstoy observed: "Wrong does not cease to be wrong because the majority share in it."

Truth therefore must rest itself on something much more reliable and certain than opinion, feeling, or majority will. By its nature, truth should be a restraining influence on these things.

It is in this context that the Bible should be approached. If God is real, did He inspire the writing of Scripture? If so, is the Christian Bible we have today an accurate presentation of Divine revelation? If so, then we are obligated to adhere to its principles and truths, regardless of any personal reservations, concerns, or bias - and regardless of popular opinion. Something to think about.

Published by Brian Tubbs

Brian Tubbs is the Feature Writer & Columnist for Protestantism at Suite101.com, the principal blogger for the American Revolution & Founding Era blog, and the founder and course manager for ChristianMarriag...  View profile

  • Most people prefer to determine their own value system - their own moral truths.
  • Pope John Paul II: "Truth is not the fruit of one's imagination."
  • Truth must rest on something more reliable than opinion, feeling, or majority will.

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  • Brian Tubbs12/18/2007

    The article is primarily intended to argue that there is such a thing as objective truth. I understand that some people may accept the existence of absolute truth, and yet not conclude that Christianity is it. As to where Plato is, that's God's call, not mine.

  • A. McMillen12/18/2007

    I find it ironic, that you use Plato as a reference to prove the existence of concrete truth, such as religion, when Plato himself was not a Christian. Do you believe that this wise man is now burning in the fires of hell because he did not accept Jesus as his personal lord and savior?

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