The Bible is not relevant because culture approves of it; it is relevant because it comes from the eternal, unchanging Creator who has authority over all people in every generation (Genesis 1:1; Exodus 3:14). Scripture is God-breathed, carrying the very words of God as they were written by men moved by the Holy Spirit (2 Timothy 3:16; 2 Peter 1:21). While human opinions, values, and trends constantly change, God's truth does not, nor can His standards be redefined by human wisdom (Isaiah 40:13–14; Proverbs 14:12). Jesus Himself declared that God's Word would remain until all is accomplished, making it relevant until the end of time (Matthew 5:17–18). Scripture continues to be sufficient for teaching, correcting, and equipping God's people for every good work (2 Timothy 3:16–17). More importantly, it reveals humanity's greatest and unchanging problem—sin—and God's solution through Jesus Christ, who died for sinners and promises salvation to all who trust in Him (Romans 6:23; John 6:37; Romans 10:9–10). The Bible is not a relic of the past but the living Word of God that still speaks with authority and offers hope today for those who turn to Him for the forgiveness of sins.
Society would love
the Bible to be irrelevant. We live in a “progressive” world where one’s feelings
override truth and where sin is good if it feels good or makes one happy. As
the world imagines itself growing in sophistication, whether that’s relationally,
politically, or biologically, the Bible looks archaic.
However, it was
written by the eternal Creator. Right and wrong are defined by His nature and,
as the unchanging God, He doesn’t “progress” since He’s always been perfect. The
Bible is based on His nature and thus also is perfect. Therefore, He and
His Word are never irrelevant.
This means we are not free to treat Scripture as an outdated voice competing with modern opinion but as the living speech of the eternal Creator who defines reality itself. The same God who spoke the universe into existence is the One who still speaks to us through His Word, revealing what is true, what is good, and what leads to life.
To ignore Scripture is not to outgrow it but to step away from the very design of the One who made us. Living wisely means yielding our thoughts, desires, and decisions to what God has already spoken. His Word is not restrictive but rightly ordered for human flourishing. In a world that constantly shifts its definition of truth, we are called to anchor our lives in the unchanging voice of God.