
As we go about our daily lives we get showered with other people’s opinions, which includes good and bad advice. But who can we trust?
Many voices wanting to be heard
‘Experts’ tell us:
- what we should do,
- what we must avoid,
- and what is wrong and right.
By sifting through all these things, we formulate our own opinions, and we give these different sources a certain amount of authority.
For example, we may have an elderly neighbour who is well travelled, and they seem to have wise words to say on many things, so we take a lot of notice of what they think.
To make the right choices in our lives, we need to know that the information we are told is accurate, and that it is the truth.
If the information we are told isn’t reliable, then how can we make the right choice?
Let’s look at three areas which can have a big influence on how we live out our lives:
Can we trust education?

What about everything we have learned in our centres of education?
In 1978 I was at college listening to a botany lecture.
The lady lecturer had just finished explaining about an experiment which proved a certain theory on how plants worked.
Then one of the students said that he had seen an experiment which disproved what she had just said. (He did give more details).
Her answer was very interesting!
She said : “At this level, this particular experiment is taught as fact, but if you take a degree course then it won’t be taught as fact.”
So beware, not everything that we are taught is the truth!
Can we trust television, radio and the Internet?

You can trust the TV can’t you?
What you hear is the truth, isn’t it?
In 2002, I was watching a history programme about the Philistines.
The ‘expert’ said that the Philistines originally came from the Greece area because they wore metal shin guards and because of the shape of their helmets.
So far, so good.
But then he said that the Bible tells us that the Philistines have always lived ‘here’, (he was standing to the west of Israel).
So he was telling us that the Bible was wrong and what he was telling us was the truth.
He very effectively cast doubt on the Bible.
But in fact the Bible tells us that the Philistines came from Caphtor.
Amos writing about what God had said tells us this:
Did I not bring Israel up from Egypt, the Philistines from Caphtor ….”
Amos 9:7
For a long time Caphtor was thought to be in Egypt, but more modern thought is that it was in the north-eastern Mediterranean area:
From the 18th century onwards commentators attempted several identifications of Caphtor which increasingly disregarded the traditional identification as an Egyptian coastal locality in the vicinity of Pelusium.
Wikipedia [i]
These included identification with Coptus, Colchis, Cyprus, Cappadocia in Asia Minor, Cilicia, and Crete.”
Colchis is in modern day West Georgia on the Black Sea, Cappadocia is Turkey, Cilicia is Southern Turkey, Cyprus is the island just below Turkey and Crete is an island just below Greece.
So the expert had said that the Philistines had come from Greece or somewhere like that, which was true, but his problem was telling us that the Bible had got it wrong!
How many people would have seen that programme and would have believed that the Bible was wrong?
Can we trust newspapers and magazines?
How much truth is there in a newspaper?
About 20 years ago the newspapers were saying:
Children dive for cover under their desks, as RAF plane crashes next to an infant School.
A local newspaper circulating on the Suffolk and Norfolk border.
The children had to be comforted by their form teacher after this traumatic incident.
Parents were furious that RAF planes are allowed to fly so dangerously close to the school.”
Is this the truth?
I happened to know two of the mothers who had children at that school, and this is what really happened:
The mothers, and some fathers, picked their children up from school as normal.
A mother of two children asked them about their day:
“Neil got sent home from school for being naughty,… and we saw a plane go over, and two white mushrooms came out of it.”
The mother asked if anything else had happened, and they replied no.
The next day the newspaper reporters were waiting outside the school and they immediately bombarded the parents with questions:
“Don’t you think it is terrible how low these RAF planes fly? Isn’t it dangerous having RAF jets flying so close to the school? Aren’t you scared for your children’s safety?”
But the reporters were ignoring the parents who were saying:
“NO the plane crashed a long way away.”
The reporters just weren’t interested in what they had to say.
They only wanted to find the parents who would agree to their particular slant!
Fake News, do we trust everything?
Fake News is prolific on platforms like Facebook and other social media websites.
Many of us share things on those platforms and it is so easy to like another persons comment or share an article, etc.
But when you see something you like online, do you check to make sure that it’s true before you share it?
Not everything that we read or see on the internet is true – and if it isn’t, and we share it, we could be persuading some to believe something that is actually made up.
This is called fake news and there is a huge amount of it about.
There are two kinds of fake news:
1. False stories that are deliberately created to deliberately slander someone else, or to get people believing something that is untrue.
These are deliberate lies that are put online and some people make money out of doing it.
2. Stories that may have some truth to them, but they’re not completely accurate.
This is because the people propagating the story haven’t done the research and haven’t checked to see if it is true.
Or they pad their story out to make it longer and more exciting by just adding totally made up material.
Many people are forgetting ‘truth’ and are aiming at getting as many shares as possible.
Unfortunately fake news can and does get into the newspapers and magazines.
Many true stories can be padded out to fill a slot so they can get distorted and end up just not being true.
So just who can we trust? We are are a sceptical generation, can we trust anything or anyone?
Can we trust the Bible?
The Time magazine says this about the Bible:
Simply put, the Bible is the most influential book of all-time… The Bible has done more to shape literature, history, entertainment, and culture than any book ever written.
Time magazine March 2007
Its influence on world history is unparalleled, and shows no signs of abating.
Even pop culture is deeply influenced by the Bible.”
Wikipedia’s ‘Bible’ page states:
With estimated total sales of over five billion copies, it is widely considered to be the best-selling book of all time.
‘Bible’ Wikipedia [ii]
As of the 2000’s, it sells approximately 100 million copies annually.”

When Jesus was praying to God the Father, He said:
Your Word is Truth.”
John 17:17
That means the Bible, God’s Word, is Truth, is the Truth.
On another occasion Jesus said:
If you hold to my teaching, you are really my disciples (followers).
John 8:31-32
Then you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free.”
Can you imagine what those people listening said?
It’s the same response that we would say now:
We’ve never been slaves to anyone!
John 8:33
How can you say that we shall be set free?”
And that’s what we would say, isn’t it?
But Jesus’ answer is very interesting: He said:
I tell you the Truth. Everyone who sins is a slave to sin.”
John 8:34 NLT
‘Truth!” It’s that word again!
We are all slaves to sin!
What is sin? It’s all those things we:
- shouldn’t have done to other people: Cruel thoughts, telling lies, hurting people, etc.
- should have done: A helping hand, sharing things, encouraging rather than criticising, etc.
But that is not all:
- It’s when we ignore God and go our own way.
Most things we hear on the T.V. or what we read in newspapers, etc, is a mixture of truth and error.
But the Bible is pure, unmixed Truth.
So when we read the Bible, we see how pure, and holy God is, and how twisted our own lives are!
The Bible is the Truth and it is totally trustworthy.
But the Truth doesn’t just stop there
It shows us how to escape our slavery to sin – to be set free!
In fact, a word used in the Bible to describe this escape is ‘redeem’ which means to ‘buy up’ from the slave market.
It was Jesus Christ who paid the price to release us from our slavery to sin:
..the Son of Man (Jesus) did not come to be served, but to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many.”
Matthew 20:28
For there is one God and one mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus, who gave himself as a ransom for all…”
1 Timothy 2:5-6
Are we willing to face the Truth?
Jesus did many other miraculous signs in the presence of his disciples, which are not recorded in this book.
John 20:30-31
But these are written that you may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, and that by believing you may have life in his name.”
See the next article: Do you follow celebrities, or who?
References open in new windows:
[i] ‘Caphtor’ Wikipedia
[ii] ‘Bible’ Wikipedia
Education image: thanks to Serif ARTGallery CD