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Wednesday, July 8, 2026

 

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📘 WHAT DOES THE BIBLE SAY?

A Simple Foundation for New Believers

Six Chapters • Straight from Scripture • King James Version

WRITTEN BY

CHUCK TRUSTY

Pastor | Dardanelle, Arkansas

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How to Use This Booklet

Welcome to the family of God! This booklet was written for you — the new believer — and for any believer who wants the foundations laid plainly. It asks one question six times, about six subjects, and answers each time the same way: not with opinions, but with Scripture.

Chapter 1 — What does the Bible say about the Bible?

Chapter 2 — What does the Bible say about salvation?

Chapter 3 — What does the Bible say about prayer?

Chapter 4 — What does the Bible say about worship?

Chapter 5 — What does the Bible say about the church?

Chapter 6 — What does the Bible say about Christian living?

Read one chapter in a week in this booklet with your Bible open, and look up every verse for yourself, and mark the “Simple truth” lines — they are the handles to carry each lesson by. All quotations are from the King James Bible, and every chapter uses the same rule you will learn in Chapter One: let the Bible explain the Bible.

Author’s Note — “I have made every effort to avoid injecting my own brand of theology into these lessons. These pages are not intended to explain what I say, but what the Bible says. My goal is simple: to let God’s Word speak in its own words, in its own context.” — C.T.

📘 CHAPTER ONE

WHAT DOES THE BIBLE SAY ABOUT THE BIBLE?

A simple foundation for new believers

⭐ INTRODUCTION

Every believer needs “one” unshakable foundation upon which to BUILD their lives:

What does “The Bible” say about The Bible?

Before we talk about salvation, prayer, worship, the church or Christian living, we must settle this one truth:

Why do we trust the Bible?
Why do we believe it?
Why do we build our lives on it?

This chapter gives simple, bullet‑proof answers — straight from Scripture, supported by original language, and grounded in real history.

Author’s Note
“I have made every effort to avoid injecting my own brand of theology into these lessons.
These pages are not intended to explain what I say about the Bible, but rather what the Bible says about itself.
My goal is simple: to let God’s Word speak in its own words, in its own context, without adding personal opinion or denominational interpretation.”

I. THE BIBLE CLAIMS TO BE GOD’S WORD

(What we believe)

2 Timothy 3:16 says, “All scripture is given by inspiration of God… and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness:”

After the first phrase telling us WHERE The Bible comes from, the rest of the verse explains that Scripture teaches us, corrects us, and trains us.

The key word in this verse is inspiration — the Greek word theopneustos, meaning:

            God‑breathed

            breathed out by God Himself

The Bible is God’s breath in written form.
It is not possible to speak without breathing out (exhaling).
This is the idea behind “God‑breathed” — God actually spoke the words of Scripture, and holy men wrote down what God breathed out as He spoke.

This is exactly what the word theopneustos (inspiration) means:
Theo = God
Pneō = to breathe out

This is not a theological argument — it is simply a “factual” explanation of the word itself.
• When a person speaks, they must breathe out.
• When God “breathed out” Scripture, He was speaking.
• The Bible is God’s spoken words, written down by men He guided.

Simple truth:
If God breathed it, we can trust it.

II. THE BIBLE WAS WRITTEN IN REAL HISTORY

(Why context matters)

The Bible was written:

            by real men

            in real places

            facing real situations

            during real historical events

It was written over 1,500 years, in three languages (Hebrew, Aramaic, Greek), across three continents.

This matters because:

            The Bible is not myth.

            It is rooted in culture, customs, geography, and history.

            Understanding the culture helps us understand the meaning.

Illustration — The Owner’s Manual
The Bible is like the owner’s manual for life.
When you buy a phone, the manual tells you how it works, how to set it up, and how to take care of it.
If a store clerk gives you instructions that “contradict” the manual, then you have a foundation for your disagreement — the manual is the authority.
In the same way, the Bible is our authority.
It tells us who God is, who we are, how life works, and what God expects.
When someone’s opinion contradicts Scripture, we go with the “Owner’s Manual.”
That is why context matters — we want to know what the Author actually said, not what someone else thinks He said.

Simple truth:
The Bible is anchored in real history, not imagination.

III. THE BIBLE INTERPRETS ITSELF

(Why we believe it)

Isaiah 28:10 For precept must be upon precept, precept upon precept; line upon line, line upon line; here a little, and there a little:

“precept upon precept… line upon line…”
The remainder of the passage explains that God teaches truth by comparing Scripture with Scripture.

This means:

            Hard verses are explained by clear verses.

            The Bible is its own commentary.

            The Bible never contradicts itself.

Author’s Note
"Commentaries can be helpful, but they are NOT Scripture.
A commentary is simply a scholar’s interpretation of what he thinks a passage means.
Because of that, we must always remember that human explanations — no matter how educated — can still be influenced by opinion.

Proverbs reminds us that ‘there is a way that seemeth right unto a man.’
What seems right to a person is not the same as what God has said.

This is why we let the Bible explain the Bible.
Scripture is the final authority — not commentaries, not opinions, and not personal interpretations."

Example — “Work Out Your Own Salvation”

Php 2:12 ¶ Wherefore, my beloved, as ye have always obeyed, not as in my presence only, but now much more in my absence, work out your own salvation with fear and trembling.

Philippians 2:12 says, “Work out your own salvation…”
Some misunderstand this to mean:

“earn your own salvation.”

“work for your salvation”

“save yourself”

But that is this what Paul really meant?

Author’s Note
"I want to avoid inserting my own theology here, so let me simply point out the two opposing views people often bring to this verse:

that a person must work in order to earn salvation, and

that salvation is God’s gift and cannot be earned by human effort.

Instead of choosing a side based on opinion, we will apply our rule:
use a clear verse to explain a complex verse.

Let’s see what God has said about these two ideas by comparing Scripture with Scripture."

“At first glance, Philippians 2:12 (‘work out your own salvation’) seems to contradict Ephesians 2:8–9 (‘not of works’). But Scripture never contradicts Scripture. The clear verse (Ephesians) explains the complex verse (Philippians). Since salvation is a gift and cannot be earned, Philippians 2:12 cannot mean ‘work for salvation.’ It means to ‘work out’ — to live out — the salvation God has already placed within you. We do not work to be saved; we work because we are saved.”

So, we apply our rule:

If you don’t understand a verse, look for another verse that says the same thing more simply.

And the Bible gives us the perfect “simple verse”:

Ephesians 2:8–9 says,

2:8 For by grace are ye saved through faith; and that not of yourselves: it is the gift of God:

9 Not of works, lest any man should boast.

“For by grace are ye saved through faith…”
The rest of the passage makes it clear salvation is not of works.

The simple verse explains the harder verse.

“Work out” means to live out the salvation you already have — it does not mean to earn it.

So now we compare:

            Philippians 2:12 — “work out your salvation”

            Ephesians 2:8–9 — “salvation is not of works”

The simple verse in Ephesians explains the harder verse in Philippians.

⭐ WHAT WE LEARN FROM COMPARING THEM

Philippians 2:12 is not about earning salvation, but that it
is about living out the salvation that we already have.

“Work out” = bring to the surface what God has already put inside you.

Just like:

            you “work out” a math problem (you don’t create the answer — you reveal it)

            you “work out” a muscle (you don’t create the muscle — you strengthen it)

So, the simple verse (Ephesians 2:8–9) protects you from misunderstanding the harder verse (Philippians 2:12).

This concept teaches us not to:

            panic when a verse seems confusing.

            jump to conclusions.

            build doctrine on only one verse.

            Let the Bible explain the Bible.

And it reinforces our booklet’s theme:

“What does The Bible say?”
Not “What do people say the Bible says?”

1. This concept protects new believers (any believers) from doubt

When someone hits a confusing verse, the enemy whispers:

            “See? The Bible contradicts itself.”

            “This doesn’t make sense — maybe it’s not true.”

            “You can’t trust this book.”

This simple truth shuts that down immediately.

2. It teaches humility

Understanding Scripture is a growth process, not a one‑time download.

We are learning that:

            “It’s OK not to know everything yet.”

            “Keep reading — keep growing — keep comparing Scripture with Scripture.”

3. It reinforces the authority of Scripture

We are learning that:

The Bible is right — even when I don’t understand it yet.

That’s foundational.

4. This simple truth:

becomes the natural conclusion:

            Hard verse

            Simple verse

            Comparison

            Clarity

            Reassurance

⭐ SECOND EXAMPLE

John 1:18 No man hath seen God at any time; the only begotten Son, which is in the bosom of the Father, he hath declared him.

“No man hath seen God at any time…”

But another verse says:

Ex 33:11 And the LORD spake unto Moses face to face, as a man speaketh unto his friend. And he turned again into the camp: but his servant Joshua, the son of Nun, a young man, departed not out of the tabernacle.

“And the LORD spake unto Moses face to face…”
(Exodus 33:11 — quoted portion)

The simple explanation comes from comparing Scripture:

            John is speaking of God in His full glory

            Exodus is speaking of God revealing Himself in a veiled, human‑friendly form

The simple verse clarifies the harder one.

The Bible explains the Bible.
And if there is something we don’t yet understand, that does not mean there is something wrong with the Bible — it simply means that our understanding is still growing.
God’s Word is perfect.
Our understanding is in progress.

Simple truth:
The Bible explains the Bible.

IV. THE BIBLE IS PRESERVED BY GOD

(Why we trust the KJV)

Ps 12:6 The words of the LORD are pure words: as silver tried in a furnace of earth, purified seven times.

7 Thou shalt keep them, O LORD, thou shalt preserve them from this generation for ever.

Psalm 12:6–7 says, “The words of the LORD are pure words…”
The rest of the passage says God will keep and preserve His words “forever”.

Preservation means:

            God didn’t just give His Word —
He kept His Word.

Simple truth:
If God gave His Word, He also kept His Word.

⭐ A Quick Word About Bible Versions

New believers often ask, “Which Bible should I use?”
This is an important question, and the answer does not need to be complicated.

The King James Bible is a translation — not an interpretation.
The translators took each word from the original Hebrew, Aramaic, and Greek and gave its closest meaning in English. They translated words, not ideas. They were not giving commentary or opinion — they were defining in English what God originally said.

Transliteration
Sometimes the translators used transliteration, which means carrying the sound of a word into English when no single English word fully expressed its meaning.

Examples include: baptize, Christ, Satan, and amen.

The Greek word baptizō literally means “to dip” or “to immerse,” but no English word carried the full meaning without adding or removing something from the definition.

So, instead of choosing a word that might limit or distort the actual meaning, the translators preserved the original sound and allowed the Bible itself to define the word.

Why did English Bibles transliterate it?

“The word baptize was already used in English Bibles long before 1611 (Wycliffe, Tyndale, Geneva, etc.), so the KJV translators simply continued the established English usage.”

Because no single English word carried the full meaning of baptizō:

            “dip” is too narrow

            “immerse” is correct but incomplete

            “wash” is too broad

            “cleanse” is not specific

            “submerge” is too mechanical

Transliteration preserved the sound of the original word so that:

            preachers could teach the meaning

            the word carried its full theological weight

            no English word distorted or limited the meaning

Translation gives the meaning.
Transliteration gives the sound.

Modern Versions
Many modern versions use a “thought‑for‑thought” method.
Instead of translating the words, they translate what they believe the idea means.

This can change doctrine.

Examples:

            Mary called a “young woman” instead of a “virgin.”

            “Hell” is replaced with “the grave.”

            References to the blood of Christ are softened or removed completely.

These are not small differences.

The KJV preserves the exact words God gave — not someone’s interpretation of those words.
That is why the KJV is the safest and most trustworthy Bible for a new believer.

V. THE BIBLE IS UNDERSTANDABLE

(Why new believers can read it confidently)

Ps 119:130 ¶ The entrance of thy words giveth light; it giveth understanding unto the simple.

Psalm 119:130 says, “The entrance of thy words giveth light…”
The rest of the verse says that God’s Word gives understanding to the simple.

This means you do not need:

            a degree

            a commentary

            a scholar

            or to be a scholar

To understand the Bible, you need:

            the Bible

            the Holy Spirit

            a humble heart

            a willingness to learn

⭐ Koine Greek — The Language of the Common Man

The New Testament was written in Koine Greek, which means “common Greek.”
It was the everyday street language spoken by fishermen, farmers, soldiers, and ordinary people.

God did not choose the scholarly Classical Greek.
He chose the simplest, most universal form of Greek so everyone could understand His Word.

This shows us that:

            God wanted the New Testament written for ordinary people

            The Bible is not an academic book — it is a people’s book

            God chose the simplest language available to communicate the greatest message ever given

⭐ What Other Greek Forms Existed?

A) Classical Greek

            Formal, literary Greek

            Used by philosophers (Plato, Aristotle)

            Complex grammar and vocabulary

            Not used by common people

            Not used in the New Testament

B) Koine Greek

            Simplified, everyday Greek

            Spread by Alexander the Great

            Used from 300 BC to AD 300

            The language of the New Testament

            Easy to read and understand

C) Septuagint / Liturgical Greek

            Greek translation of the Old Testament

            Still Koine, but with Hebrew influence

            Used in synagogues

            Familiar to Greek‑speaking Jews

So, the New Testament writers used the simplest, clearest, most universal form of Greek available.
That was not an accident — that was God’s design.

Simple Truth:

God wrote the Bible for people — not for professors

VI. THE BIBLE IS THE FINAL AUTHORITY FOR THE BELIEVER

(Why we build our lives on it)

Matthew 4:4 But he answered and said, It is written, Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God.

Matthew 4:4 says, “Man shall not live by bread alone…”
The rest of the verse says that we live by every word that comes from God.

This means that our lives should NOT be built upon:

            feelings

            culture

            tradition

            opinions

            experiences

BUT upon Every word of Scripture which is our authority.

Pr 16:25 ¶ There is a way that seemeth right unto a man, but the end thereof are the ways of death

Proverbs 16:25 says, “There is a way that seemeth right unto a man…”
The rest of the verse warns us that the end of that “seems right path” is death.

This principle was true long before the first word of the Bible was written.
Without the guidance of God’s Word, we would naturally choose a path that feels right — but ends in spiritual ruin.

LETS LOOK AT WHY THIS EXPLANATION ABOUT THE AUTHORITY OF THE SCRIPTURE IS STRONG

Author’s Note:
We want to avoid inserting any brand of theology. As a new believer, I want you to consider the actual meaning of Matthew 4:4 and Proverbs 16:25.

If left to our own logic, mankind could never determine truth. And even with the Bible — which is without question God’s Word — without the Holy Spirit guiding a willing heart, all the education in the world would not be enough to lead us into God’s truth.

✔ 1. It connects the doctrine to a Scripture principle
Proverbs 16:25 begins with, “There is a way that seemeth right unto a man…”
The rest of the verse warns that the end of that “seems right” path is destruction.

We are using this truth to show:
Human instinct is not reliable — but God’s Word is.

This is exactly the point of the “final authority” section.

2. It shows the timelessness of the principle
This concept — “a way that seems right” — was true long before the first word of Scripture was written.

Even before the Bible existed:
• God’s way was right in the Garden of Eden
• Man’s way seemed right in the Garden of Eden
• Man’s way led to death in the Garden of Eden

The Bible simply reveals what has always been true.

3. It reinforces the need for Scripture
Without the guidance of the Bible, we would live and die in a way that seemed right — but ended in spiritual death.

That is exactly the point of Proverbs 16:25.
It’s simple.
It’s clear.
It’s bullet‑proof.

✔ 4. This naturally leads into our “simple truth” summary line for this section:

Simple truth:
If the Bible says it — that settles it.

VII. THE BIBLE IS PROFITABLE FOR DAILY LIVING

(Why we obey it)

2Ti 3:16 All scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness:

2 Timothy 3:16–17 begins with, “All scripture is… profitable…”
The rest of the passage explains that Scripture:

            teaches us what is right (doctrine)

            shows us what is wrong (reproof)

            shows us how to get right (correction)

            shows us how to stay right (instruction)

Discernment — Learn Truth, Not Error
Many people make the mistake of trying to learn everything they can about false religion.
But the safest way to recognize what is wrong is to become firmly grounded in what is right.

Our journey through life is not to be viewed as a giant list of every possible belief where we cross out what is wrong and accept whatever is left.
God never intended us to study error in order to avoid it — He intended us to know the truth so clearly that error becomes obvious.

Jesus said in John 8:32, “And ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.”

This reinforces the same principle:
Truth frees us.
Error loses its power when truth is known.

The Bible does not tell us to study every error — it tells us to know the truth so well that error cannot deceive us.

Simple truth:
The Bible is not just true — it is useful.

VIII. THE BIBLE REVEALS JESUS CHRIST

(Why the Bible matters most)

John 5:39 Search the scriptures; for in them ye think ye have eternal life: and they are they which testify of me.

John 5:39 says, “Search the scriptures…”
The rest of the verse says the Scriptures testify of Christ.

Hebrews 11 is often called “the faith chapter,” and for good reason.
Over and over it uses the phrase “by faith” or “through faith.”

This teaches us something essential:
Faith is how we see what God has said.

Hebrews 11:1 explains that faith is the “evidence” of things we cannot see with our eyes.
Hebrews 11:6 says that without faith it is impossible to please God.

This means:
• Without faith, we cannot see God’s hand in Scripture
• Without faith, we cannot understand spiritual truth
• Without faith, the Bible remains a closed book
• Without faith, we cannot recognize Jesus in the pages of Scripture

But WITH faith — even a small amount — the entire Bible opens up.

Faith is the key that unlocks everything that God has revealed.
Faith is how we “connect” to God.
Faith is how we recognize Jesus Christ in the Scriptures.

This is exactly what Jesus meant in John 5:39 when He said the Scriptures “testify of Me.”

From Genesis to Revelation, the Bible points to:
• His coming
• His sacrifice
• His resurrection
• His kingdom
• His return

Faith allows us to see Him there.

The Bible reveals Jesus Christ — and faith is what opens our eyes to see Him.

Author’s Note:
Understanding the Bible ultimately requires faith. There is plenty of evidence that Scripture is trustworthy, but accepting it as God’s Word is a spiritual matter.

Faith is how mankind “connects” to God. Without faith, a person cannot fully receive the Bible as God’s Word or as the final authority for life.

Faith is the key that opens our eyes to the things of God. Without faith we cannot see God, know God, hear God, or find God.

As a new believer, I encourage you to prayerfully read Hebrews 11 — the “faith chapter.” Notice how often the phrase “by faith” or “through faith” appears. Everything God’s people understood, obeyed, and accomplished began with faith.

Simple truth:
The Bible is not just a book —
it is a revelation of a Person.

⭐ CHAPTER SUMMARY

            The Bible is God‑breathed.

            The Bible was written in real history.

            The Bible interprets itself.

            The Bible is preserved.

            The Bible is trustworthy.

            The Bible is understandable.

            The Bible is our final authority.

            The Bible is profitable.

            The Bible reveals Jesus.

 

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