"THE GOSPEL OF JOHN"
What Is Truth? (18:37-38)
INTRODUCTION
- When Jesus appeared before Pilate, the subject of truth was discussed...
- Jesus claimed to bear witness to the truth - Jn 18:37
- Pilate raised the perennial question: "What is truth?" - Jn 18:38
- Today, many people sound a lot like Pilate...
- A Barna Research Group survey on what Americans believe asked the question, "Is there absolute Truth?"...
- Sixty-six percent of adults responded that they believe that "there is no such thing as absolute truth; different people can define truth in conflicting ways and still be correct"
- Seventy-two percent of those aged 18 to 25 expressed this belief
- In a series of more than twenty interviews conducted at random at a large university, people were asked if there was such a thing as absolute truth - truth that is true across all times and cultures for all people. All but one respondent answered along these lines:
- "Truth is whatever you believe"
- "There is no absolute truth"
- "If there were such a thing as absolute truth, how could we know what it is?"
- "People who believe in absolute truth are dangerous"
[What is the Christian perspective regarding truth? Is truth whatever you believe? Can we know what is absolute truth? Let's first summarize two basic views regarding truth...]
- TWO VIEWS OF TRUTH
- TRUTH CORRESPONDS TO REALITY...
- Commonly called the "correspondence view" of truth
- A statement is true if and only if it corresponds to or agrees with factual reality
- This view presupposes a law of logic called the law of bivalence
- Any unambiguous, declarative statement must be either true or false
- It cannot be neither true nor false; nor can it be both true and false
- E.g., the statement "I am standing in front of you"...
- Is true only if, in fact, I am standing here in front of you
- Must be either true or false, it cannot be both true and false
- The correspondence view of truth holds that propositional or declarative statements are subject to verification and falsification
- A statement can be proven false if it can be shown to disagree with objective reality
- E.g., the statement "The world is flat"...
- Is either true or false, it cannot be both
- Photographs from space have falsified flat-earth claims
- TRUTH IS RELATIVE, NOT ABSOLUTE...
- Commonly called the "relativistic view" of truth
- What is true depends on the views of persons or cultures
- Not on whether statements correspond to objective reality
- For a statement to be true simply means that a person or culture to believes it to be true; people with this view of truth say things like:
- "Well, if that's true for you..."
- "We can't judge other cultures"
- Poet Steve Turner wrote a parody of this attitude and called it
"Creed". In part he said:
I believe that each man must find the truth that is right for him. Reality will adapt accordingly. The universe will readjust. History will alter. I believe that there is no absolute truth excepting the truth that there is no absolute truth.
- When truth is deemed dependent upon the person or culture holding the belief, anything can become "true"); for example...
- One person can say "Jesus is Lord" and another can say "Allah is Lord"
- Both statements will be true, if they accurately express the sentiments of the speakers
- This view seems to advance tolerance and civility, but it does so at the expense of logic
- The very definition of "Lord" precludes the possibility they are both "Lord"
- Those who say there is no absolute truth make decisions every day based things they believe are true or false; for example...
- They turn on a light believing in the reality of electricity
- They drive a car believing in the effectiveness of the engine
- No one flying would want to be directed by a navigator who did not believe in the truth of his instruments
- No one undergoing brain surgery would want to be operated on by a surgeon who did not believe that some things about the brain were true and some not true
- If there are no absolutes, there is no right and wrong
- I can kill you, steal from you, lie to you, and you can't say it is wrong
- Because if I believe I should do such things, and succeed, then it works for me and it has become my personal truth (and who are you to judge me?)
- "In the absence of truth, power is the only game in town." - Richard John Neuhaus
- THE BIBLICAL VIEW OF TRUTH
- BIBLICAL WORDS FOR TRUTH...
- True (alethes) - "unconcealed, manifest...actual, true to fact" - Vine
- True (alethinos) - "denotes 'true' in the sense of 'real, ideal, genuine;'" - ibid.
- Truth (aletheia)
- "objectively, signifying 'the reality lying at the basis of an appearance; the manifested, veritable essence of a matter' (Cremer)" - ibid.
- "subjectively, 'truthfulness,' 'truth,' not merely verbal, but sincerity and integrity of character" - ibid.
- BIBLICAL STATEMENTS REGARDING TRUTH...
- God is a God of truth - Deut 32:4
- Jesus is the truth, and full of truth, and spoke the truth - Jn 14:6; 1:14; 8:45
- The Holy Spirit is the Spirit of Truth, and guided the apostles into all the truth - Jn 14:17; 16:13
- The Word of God is truth - Jn 17:17
- The judgments of God are according to truth - Ps 96:13; Ro 2:2
- Christians should walk in the truth as revealed by Jesus, including the standard of morality He taught - cf. Ep 4:17-32; 5:1-17
- Christians should patiently teach others the truth - cf. 2 Ti 2:23-26
- Many will turn their ears away from the truth - cf. 2Ti 4:1-4
[Christians have historically affirmed the "correspondence view" of truth. For good reasons, because it is consistent with...]
CONCLUSION
- What is truth...?
- Truth is what is real
- God is real, and reveals what is real
- God is truth, and what He says is the truth
- Call yourself what you may, but you cannot be a Christian unless...
- You hold the correspondence view of truth
- You believe in moral absolutes of right and wrong
- You accept Jesus and His Word as the ultimate source of truth, especially in regards to morality and salvation
For those willing to accept Jesus as the ultimate source of truth, they will be greatly blessed... - cf. Jn 8:31-36
Executable Outlines, Copyright © Mark A. Copeland, 2021