THE WORLD’S GREATEST
QUESTIONS
with One Minute
Answers
by Jim Bramlett
The following are among the greatest and most
frequently asked questions
in the world, questions that people ask others or
maybe just ask themselves.
The answers provided can be read within
approximately one minute.
Can
the existence of God
be proven?
What is God
like?
Where did God come
from?
How do you explain the
"Trinity?
Does evil really exist, or
is it just relative?
Why does a loving God allow
so much evil?
But what about
disasters and accidents that
are no ones fault?
Are all religions just
different paths to the
same God?
What about those who
have never heard the gospel?
Is reincarnation
possible?
Can life after death be
proven?
Is there a literal
hell?
Can we know the
future?
Are we near the end of
the world?
Which is the best, or
"one true church?"
Why do Christians sometimes
sin?
QUESTION: Can
the existence of God be proven?
ANSWER: The Bible does not attempt to
"prove" the existence of
God; it simply declares Him to be. The very
first verse of the Bible
says, "In the beginning God..." The Bible also
declares that every human
has an innate awareness of His existence and that
His reality is seen in
creation. God is spirit and thus infinite; His
being cannot be subjected
to physical laws, nor to human experimental
methods. However, philosophers
have put forth powerful and logical arguments for
God's existence, such
as the Cosmological Argument (there must be a
"first cause"), Teleological
Argument (the intelligent "design" of the universe
reveals a "Designer"),
Ontological Argument (that a finite being can even
conceptualize an infinite
Creator is evidence of His existence), and several
others. Individually,
each argument is extremely persuasive, but
collectively they are so overwhelming
that they put the entire "burden of proof" on the
other side of the question-to
prove that He does not exist in the face of all
the evidence! Perhaps
the greatest proof we have (other than observed
creation) is the birth,
life, death, and resurrection of Jesus
Christ. In addition are the
objective and subjective effects of His life and
ministry. The psalmist,
King David, said, "The fool says in his heart,
'There is no God.'"
Everybody else knows that there is.
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QUESTION: What is
God like?
ANSWER: The Bible reveals many
attributes of the personality
and character of God. Like a person, He has
personality and character.
He is eternal, a spirit-being. He is
omniscient (all-knowing);
nothing escapes His knowledge. He is
omnipotent (all-powerful).
He is omnipresent (everywhere present). He
is all-wise. As
a being, God apparently also has emotions.
We are told that He grieves,
and also laughs. He is holy, pure,
righteous, and perfect.
He is also revealed as faithful, merciful, kind,
and loving. In fact,
He personifies love so much that the Bible
declares, "God is love." He
is also just and intolerant of sin and evil.
But in His love, He
has provided an answer to these things through His
Son. In Jesus
the fullness of God was said to dwell, so if we
want to know what God is
like, we look at what Jesus is like. "He who
has seen me has seen
the Father," Jesus said.
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QUESTION: Where did
God come from?
ANSWER: Time is a human frame of
reference, always dependent
upon the movement of matter, such as the earth
around the sun, moon around
the earth, hands around a clock, or human
activity. God exists outside
of this frame of reference, in eternity, where
there is no beginning or
end as we think of it. His actual name as He
revealed it to Moses
in the Hebrew language is YHWH, or "Yahweh"
(mistakenly called "Jehovah"),
a derivative of the Hebrew word, "to be." He also
referred to Himself as
the "I am," in Hebrew meaning a self-existent,
self-causing, eternal being.
Yahweh is the first cause of all causes and
effects. Jesus referred
to himself as that same "I am" of the Old
Testament who has always existed.
Since He used Hebrew terminology reserved for
deity, the religious authorities
of His day thought Jesus was blaspheming.
God was not created, or
else there would be another God. He was, and
is, and always will
be.
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QUESTION: How do
you explain the "Trinity?"
ANSWER: As the ancient Hebrew Scriptures
say, "Hear, O Israel:
the LORD our God is one LORD." Both Jews and
Christians know that
there is only one God, and not three. Yet
there is a mysterious plurality
of His nature that the finite mind cannot
understand. In the Hebrew
scriptures the noun used for God (Elohim) is a
plural noun. Also,
in the above quote the word one is from the
Hebrew word echad,
sometimes meaning a "composite oneness" or
"diversity of unity" rather
than the absolute number "one." At the beginning
of creation God said to
Himself, "Let us make man in our image." In
the New Testament, in
speaking of the Father, Jesus said, "I and the
Father are one."' Much is
also said about the Holy Spirit, the Spirit of
God. Though we may
not be able to understand this tri-unity, we know
that God is Father, Son,
and Holy Spirit-three manifestations of the one
and same God for different
times and purposes. Many human analogies
attempt to explain this,
but they are all inadequate. It has been
said that the Father is
God invisible, the Son is God manifested, and the
Spirit is God in interaction
with His creation.
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QUESTION: Does
evil really exist, or is it just
relative?
ANSWER: One cannot view human history or
our current world without
concluding the reality and absoluteness of
evil. Extremes include
Hitler's death camps, the genocide in Cambodia,
rapes, murders, and drug
distribution. On a smaller scale, there is
the constant stream of
deception and corruption in governments,
businesses, and in individuals.
Organized crime has infiltrated industry, unions,
and government itself.
Evil literally pervades society, more than we
often realize, affecting
most everything we do. If we are honest, we
even see it in ourselves.
We may say or do something that will hurt someone
else, sometimes even
those who love us the most. Or evil may
manifest itself by our omission
rather than commission-not doing something we
should do, instead of doing
something we shouldn't. Only the Bible
addresses and explains the
mystery of evil, and gives its solution.
Humanity's propensity for
evil traces back to the very first humans.
It is always related to
self-seeking: the use of ones free will to exalt
or advance oneself at
the expense of others. Evil is also
personified in a spirit-being
named Satan, an angel who tried to exalt himself
in heaven and usurp God,
resulting in his expulsion. Satan has been
given limited authority
on earth. In the realm of the spirit and
through the mind and personality,
Satan operates through people. Sometimes he
merely influences a persons
behavior But if they have rejected God, he
possesses them. A person
can reject God in their lives to the point where
they actually relinquish
their wills to Satan; whether they even believe in
Satan’s reality is irrelevant.
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QUESTION: Why does
a loving God allow so much evil?
ANSWER: The answer is implicit in the
question: He "allows" it.
He doesn't cause it. As mentioned earlier,
evil is the result of
volitional creatures, creatures with a free will
who can make choices.
God's alternative was to make puppets or
automatons instead of people.
But God wanted creatures made in His own
image-spirit beings who could
"choose" to love Him. His purpose was an
eternal love relationship.
He desires to share His entire Kingdom with
cognizant creatures:
"that in the coming ages he might show the
immeasurable riches of his
grace in kindness toward us."
Thus, love motivated the creation of a humanity
with the potential to do
evil. Then, when evil was committed, love
motivated a solution by
which to restore humanity back to the relationship
for which it was created.
Evil and sin grieve God, and He longs for us to
turn toward Himself and
be forgiven and reconciled. (See "message of
reconciliation"-Chapter 6.)
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QUESTION: But what
about disasters and accidents that are no ones
fault?
ANSWER: Accidents are often traced to
human sin, such as drunken
driving or wanton carelessness, acts that can hurt
ourselves and others.
However, injury, sickness, and death do occur from
things seemingly apart
from any human cause, such as earthquakes,
tornadoes, natural disasters,
and some diseases that seem beyond our control
(why are natural disasters
always called "acts of God" but He is rarely given
credit for the good
things?). We do know that God has
established physical laws that
work consistently, such as gravity.
Biological laws control our bodies
as well as germs and viruses.
Sometimes, however, a higher
spiritual law such as prayer may override
them. We cannot always
understand why certain things happen, but we do
know from the Bible that
a sparrow cannot fall to the ground without God's
knowledge. How
much more is He aware of and concerned with human
activities? On
one occasion, Jesus was asked a question similar
to this. His answer
was that God has a purpose even in
disasters. An amazing attribute
of God is that He can take an evil and convert it
to a good purpose.
Also, we tend to look at things from a temporal,
short term perspective,
whereas God sees the much more important eternal
consequences. Our
walk in this life is by faith in an all-wise and
all-loving Father who
cares for us greatly and who is sovereignly in
control of His universe.
There is no such thing as "luck" or "accident."
Whatever happens, we can
be assured that for God's people it is a blessing,
though sometimes in
disguise. This reality is a source of
peace. Those who reject
God are faced with the horror of being subject to
the constant threats
of a seemingly capricious, impersonal, and
dangerous world.
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QUESTION:
Are
all religions just different paths to the same
God?
ANSWER: There is a great myth about
"religions." Christianity
is not really a religion, but a "relationship"
with God through His Son.
Jesus claimed exclusivity-to be the
Way, not a
way. He also claimed to be God in the
flesh. No "religion-founder"
ever claimed that. Actually, most of the
others never intended to
start a religion. Thus includes Confucius
and Lao Tzu whose later
followers combined their teachings with
superstitions, deifying the founders
who would probably denounce such an act if still
alive. Hinduism
has no founder and has about 330 million
gods. Its chief one, Brahman,
is not really a god at all but an "it." The
founder of Buddhism, Siddhartha
Gautama, was influenced by Hinduism. He kept
some of it and rejected
some of it. Buddhism is primarily an ethical
system. Gautama
never claimed to be divine or even to have divine
revelation. The
Buddhism religion is not a path to God, but to
Nirvana. But Buddhists
cannot agree on what it is, except a void or
nothingness. Islam's
Qur'an (Koran), which contains the writings of
Mohammed who was born over
500 years after Christ, is in serious conflict
with the biblical revelation,
a unified work that spans 40 generations and was
authored by 40 different
people. For example, the god of Islam is
impersonal and without love
or mercy, just the opposite of the truth. In
Islam, Mohammed is considered
the greatest prophet, and greater than Christ, who
was just another prophet.
With Judaism, God "chose" the Hebrew people
through whom to reveal Himself,
His commandments, and His plan of redemption for
the entire human race.
However, much of modern Judaism has no similarity
to the ancient faith
but is more a cultural or ethnic identity, based
largely on collective
rabbinic traditions. The Hebraic revelation
was completed in one
particular Jew, Yeshua (Jesus) the Messiah, who
fulfilled the Hebrew prophecies.
Only in the Bible is God revealed to us as a
personal and loving Father,
who Himself solved man's sin problem by His own
great sacrifice.
Only He gives us hope with a wonderful plan for
the future. This
is the "good message" or gospel.
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QUESTION: What
about those who have never heard the
gospel?
ANSWER: Most people would be astounded
if they knew how pervasively
among the nations and cultures the gospel has been
communicated over the
past 1,900 years. In some remote areas of
the earth there is more
love for Jesus than we see in America. Yet,
it is true, many have
not heard. That should motivate us all the
more to fulfill the Great
Commission of Christ: "Go into all the world and
proclaim this good news."
The good news not only gives hope of life after
death, but it sets peoples'
spirits free from fear and superstition in this
life. Some entire
cultures are economically and politically depraved
due to spiritual darkness,
with people living in fear of demonic idols and
dying of starvation while
"sacred cows" roam the streets. God wants
them to know of His love
and provision for them. But will God allow
an eternal hell for those
who do not hear? We only know what has been
revealed to us.
Beyond that, we do not know all of God's
plan. The Bible says that
all humans instinctively know of God's
reality There is evidence
that people will be judged on the light they have
been given, and what
they do with it. Other than that, we will
just have to trust in God's
fairness, of which we can be assured. We
also know for sure that:
"God gave us eternal life,
and this life is in his
Son.
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QUESTION: Is
reincarnation possible?
ANSWER: The idea that people's souls can
migrate back to the
earth as other people or as lower life forms has
its roots in Hinduism
and its concept of karma, or the law of moral
consequence. According
to karma, what a person is in this life depends on
what he did in a previous
life. One goes through a virtually endless
cycle of rebirths to reach
a final state of bliss, unlikely because
perfection must be achieved to
get there. An "unrighteous" life, however,
may result in the next
life as an insect or other creature (although
Western concepts of reincarnation
do not include lower life forms). A major
problem is that it's not
clear what the "rules" for righteousness
are. It's a "Catch 22" situation
(uncertain rules, but whatever they are you can't
keep them perfectly anyhow,
but you must keep them to reach perfection--or
else!). This is a
demonic theology of hopelessness and void of love
that has millions living
in fear and total superstition in a belief system
that equates a cow with
God. Millions of people are also locked into
a "caste system" of
extreme depravity caused by their presumed deeds
in a previous life.
A Hindu verse says, "Worship, O Cow, to thy tail
hair, and to thy hooves
... The Cow is Heaven, the Cow is Earth, the Cow
is Vishnu (God), the Lord
of Life." The Bible says that: "It is
appointed for men to
die once, and after that comes judgment."
The Bible also declares that no one can make
himself righteous or worthy.
With a free gift, God has settled that problem
once and for all in His
Son, whose own righteousness is "credited" to us
when we put our trust
in Him. At the above mentioned judgment, we
are seen as clothed in
the righteousness of this One who became our
substitute.
"We have been sanctified through the offering
of the body of Jesus
Christ once for all."
We don't have to wander through endless lifetimes
in a futile self-effort
of trying to reach perfection. God has
already solved our problem.
And we can appropriate His solution in just One
Minute! Incredibly
good news!
There is evidence that demonic spirit-beings,
sometimes operate through
human personalities. These spirits may have
operated through humans
in other generations, making it appear that the
present human habitation
has experienced things in a past life. That
is the probable explanation
of alleged recall from the personalities of people
from the past.
This may also be the answer to so-called
"multiple-personalities" that
psychiatrists can only label but not explain.
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QUESTION:
Can
life after death be proven?
ANSWER: Jesus proved it.
There is much empirical
evidence on both the reliability of the Scriptures
and the resurrection
of Jesus Christ. It is not in any way a
blind faith in an unsubstantiated
historical claim. See Chapters 1 and 2. The
New Testament talks a
lot about the next life. Paul said: "If
Christ has not been raised,
your faith is futile and you are still in your
sins ... If for this life
only we have hoped in Christ, we are of all men
most to be pitied.
But in fact Christ has been raised from the
dead... For as by a man came
death, by a man has come also the resurrection of
the dead. For as
in Adam all die, so also in Christ shall all be
made alive."
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QUESTION:
Is there
a literal hell?
ANSWER: Yes, in the sense that there is
a literal place or existence
in eternity for those who have willingly rejected
God. It was never
created for people, but for angelic beings who had
experienced God's glorious
presence and who, in spite of their experience,
rebelled against Him in
heaven. God does not send people
there. They choose to go there
by willfully deciding that they do not want God in
their lives; they obtain
their own desire. They discover too late
that any blessings they
had in this life were gifts from God and not from
their own efforts or
any human agency. Hell is a place without
God, a place of remorse,
hopelessness, darkness, and loneliness. No
way out, forever.
We don't know a lot about it except that it is a
place to avoid at all
costs. It is not a myth; Jesus spoke of it
frequently. However,
it is not known whether some of the language
referring to it is literal
or metaphorical. Jesus used the term,
Gehenna, which was the name
given to a refuse dump that burned constantly
outside the city of Jerusalem.
Whatever it is, absolutely nothing could be a
worse fate. Sadly,
it will contain people who did "good deeds" but
thought they didn’t need
God in general, or the sacrifice of His Son, in
particular. Interestingly,
there will be "no hope" in either heaven or
hell. In heaven, that
which was hoped for becomes forever realized; in
hell, forever deprived.
The idea that lost souls cease to exist at death
(the "annihilation theory")
is contrary to Jesus' specific teachings, but is
popular among some cults.
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QUESTION: Can we know
the future?
ANSWER: The Bible reveals much about the
future in the writings
of the only group of people in history with an
infallible track record
of prediction-the Hebrew prophets. Their
record confirms the divine
origin of their information. But the Bible
also reveals that God
desires individuals to walk by faith and trust in
Himself. Detailed
knowledge of the future would negate faith.
Also, humanly speaking,
a certain future is not inevitable, although God
knows the outcome.
Humans actually create and can alter the future
with their wills, actions,
and prayers. The New Testament speaks of
"prophecy" as a valid gift
and ministry even in our day. However,
prophecy in the New Testament
generally means speaking forth a message from God
and is not necessarily
predictive. Such messages always relate to
God's purposes as contrasted
with the often silly and sensational "predictions"
of popular psychics.
Modern practices of astrology, fortune telling,
divination, psychic predictions,
sorcery, and similar occult phenomenon are
strongly forbidden by God (e.g..,
Deuteronomy 18: 9-14, Galatians 5:20, etc.). A
large percentage of the
Practitioners are proven frauds, but biblically we
know that some are in
touch with "familiar spirits" (a scriptural term
for demonic spirit-beings).
Many occultists try to appear "religious,"
displaying the Bible, the symbol
of the cross, pictures of Christ, statues, and
similar trappings.
Revelations from such practitioners are flawed,
but can contain enough
facts to deceive and trap a victim into
"believing." As we previously discussed,
"believing" is not a matter to be taken
lightly. It produces commitment.
We tend to become what we believe. The
danger is that such practices
can cause, at best, delusion, self-fulfilling
mindsets and actions, fear,
anxiety, and a lack of reliance on God; at worst,
strong demonic influence
in a victim's life, sometimes causing neurosis,
psychosis, depression,
and death. Anyone so involved should
immediately stop, then pray,
renouncing the involvement and asking God's
forgiveness, cleansing, and
deliverance from demonic influence. God
tells us that if we acknowledge
Him, trust Him with all of our hearts, and not
depend on our own understanding,
He will direct the path of our lives. And we
know that His paths
are always paths of blessing and peace. I
recommend reading: Understanding
the Occult, by Josh McDowell and Don Stewart,
published by Here's Life
Publishers, Inc., San Bernardino, CA.
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QUESTION: Are
we near the end of the world?
ANSWER: The Bible does refer to a
"new heaven and a new
earth," and a time when the "earth and the works
that are upon it will
be burned up." But even without the Bible,
we know that someday our
sun, which is only a medium-sized star, will burn
out. Some astronomers
believe it can last millions of more years, but
others believe that about
half of its hydrogen supply is depleted, causing
it to be in danger of
experiencing a "nova." A nova occurs when a star
gets brighter and hotter,
then gets darker. Unfortunately, the U. S.
President, Congress or
probably even the United Nations would be helpless
to do anything about
it. Isaiah the prophet spoke of a time when
"the light of the sun
will be sevenfold." The prophet Joel spoke
of a time when "the sun
shall be turned to darkness." Jesus Himself
spoke of a great tribulation
on the earth just before He returns when "the sun
will be darkened ...
and the powers of the heavens will be
shaken." We do not know when
these things will be. Also, there is sincere
disagreement among scholars
on the order of events regarding Christ's return
as well as its immediate
effect on the world as we now know it.
However, there are many "signs"
given in the Bible for this momentous event.
While some of these
signs have appeared at various times throughout
history, many scholars
believe that this is the first time in human
history that all the signs
are converging. When speaking of His return,
Jesus described these
accompanying signs and said, "When you see all
these things, you know that
he is near, at the very gates."
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QUESTION: Which
is the best or "one true Church?"
ANSWER: See Chapter 11 for guidelines on
finding a church.
All who put their trust in Christ are part of his
spiritual body, a mystical
union which transcends human organization and
titles. In addition,
there are many kinds of "local" churches or
assemblies where believers
meet for worship and service. Some are
independent and autonomous
such as the Baptists; others have a hierarchy of
organization such as the
Presbyterians. A friend once testified
humorously how, when he was
young, he had discovered the one true
church. "It's where my mother
goes," he said. "My mother wouldn't go to
the wrong church!" A funny
statement but often a true perception. Some
groups claim exclusivity
as the "one true church," but most now admit that
the fabric of God's family
is diverse in the practice of its faith.
There is no compromise on
the common denominators of all true Christian
churches: the absolute deity
of Jesus Christ, faith in Him as a prerequisite to
salvation, and the Bible
as the inspired Word of God. Beyond that
there are many variations.
The Bible should be the only guide to faith and
practice-all Christian
beliefs and practices must be measured and judged
by the Word of God.
This may raise questions about the practices of
some churches, but if they
are not critically important doctrinal issues,
confronting them may be
more a source of discord than edification, which
always must be our aim.
No group has a monopoly on the truth. This
is all demonstrative of
the human condition that we all share. This
gives us all the more
cause to be grateful for God's mercy and to love
and appreciate all who
sincerely claim and proclaim Christ, the Son of
God, regardless of affiliation.
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QUESTION: Why do Christians
sometimes sin?
ANSWER. People who do not want God
in their lives often
try to justify themselves by referring to
Christians and saying, "I don't
want to be associated with those hypocrites."
Sadly, they are pridefully
comparing themselves to other humans and rejecting
an openness to God's
only plan of mercy for themselves. This is a
horrible price for pride
and self-justification, really only a cover for
rejecting God. And
it will be an empty plea on Judgment Day.
It's true, however, that
Christians do make mistakes. But that only
reinforces their need
for God's grace as provided by the blood
covenant. A bumper sticker
says it well: "Christians aren't perfect, just
forgiven." No one is more
aware of his sinful nature than a sincere
Christian trying to be obedient
to his Master. Even for believers, the Bible
talks about "the passions
of the flesh that war against your soul." These
passions are every kind
of selfish pull contrary to God's will, such as
anger, enmity, lust, and
covetousness. We are exhorted, with God's
help, to be continuous
overcomers. The Lord even taught us to pray,
"Lead us not into temptation."
But even though we are to aim for it, few if any
reputable Bible scholars
believe that a completely sinless state is
possible in this life, something
achieved only by Jesus Himself. So,
occasionally one may slip.
Unfortunately, we then discover that our mistakes
not only hurt ourselves
but other people, too. Sometimes we even
bring discredit upon Christ
through the image we project. Sin always
hurts God, others, and ourselves.
Any act of sin should bring a believer to a
remorseful confession to God.
This triggers one of the most glorious and
wonderful of God's promises:
"If we confess our sins, he is faithful and
just, and will forgive
our sins and cleanse us from all
unrighteousness."
What is it that cleanses us from our sins?
Remember Chapter 4 and
the cleansing action of "the world's greatest
substance?" In the
same passage as above, we are told that:
"The blood of Jesus his Son cleanses us from
all sin."
That is the blood of the eternal covenant, the
very basis of this book,
our lives, and all our hope.
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