Should we really accept the idea that each of us is free to interpret Scripture however we wish and then legitimize our interpretation by claiming the Holy Spirit told us so? When we do that, we reverse the order of authority — we take the Word of God and place it beneath our own preferences. This often hides itself behind well‑intentioned values like diversity, inclusion, compassion, and unconditional acceptance, but the effect is the same: Scripture becomes subject to us rather than us being subject to Scripture.
If the Holy Spirit truly reveals the truth of God’s Word, then His guidance would lead us toward unity in the truth, not toward a multitude of conflicting and opposing beliefs. God’s truth is not subjective or personal. There is no such thing as “your truth” or “my truth.”
God’s Word is objective truth — true for all people, in all places, whether they agree with it or not. Subjective truth belongs to the realm of opinion, and opinions are something each of us may have. But God’s revelation is not an opinion; it is His authoritative self‑disclosure.
We are free to believe God’s Word or to reject it, but we are not free to reshape it into whatever meaning we prefer. We did not create the truth found in Scripture. God gave us His truth so that we might understand who He is and what He desires us to know.
The bible talks about “The Truth” and Jesus said He was “The life, The truth and way”
God wrote a Book—just one Book—and in it He was able to say everything He wanted to say. He said it without error, without flaw, and without anything omitted or unnecessarily included.
It is the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth. And God gave His book to man through the means of inspiration, by which the Spirit of God moved in human writers who recorded the very words that God wanted them to write.
