Who Says? The Battle for Biblical Authority in an Age of Doubt.
In this episode, Bill Watkins and Corey Piper are going to enter into a discussion about authority. Authority is very much misunderstood today and sometimes it's given a very bad name. But we all live under authority, but we also trust authorities. There are certain authorities we trust and certain ones we don't. How do we know which ones we should trust and how do we know which ones we shouldn't?
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* 00:00 – 02:15: Opening Banter & Listener FeedbackDog stories, coffee chat, positive responses to prior episodes (esp. "Atheism on Trial"), and growing subscriptions. Ties personal life to the podcast's impact.
* 02:15 – 05:57: Death, Authority, and Wrestling with ScriptureDiscussion of death as revelation, To Conquer Death, and why biblical authority matters amid suffering. Contrasts evolutionary views (death as normative) with God's redemptive plan. Sets up the cultural relevance: Christians playing "fast and loose" with Scripture's authority.
* 05:57 – 14:45: What Is Authority? Person vs. Written AuthorityBill defines authority as ultimately personal ("Who says?"), trust, reliability, and expertise. Gleason Archer story illustrates building credibility. Cultural note: Parallels modern "expert" culture (scientists, politicians, influencers) vs. humble, teachable leaders like MacArthur and Sproul.
* 14:45 – 19:57: Trust, Teachability, and the Enemy's TacticsDisagreement among respected teachers (e.g., eschatology), character tests, and erosion of Scripture via subtle undermining (Moses as composite figure). References 2 Timothy 4:3-4 (itching ears, tailored teaching).
* 19:57 – 29:33: Biblical Criticism's Roots and FlawsGerman higher criticism (source/form/redaction), JEDP theory, and literary misunderstandings. Reformation parallel: Return to the plain sense of Scripture against traditions that nullify it (Mark 7). Modern American tie: Postmodern "reader-response" meaning-making in media and academia.
* 29:33 – 35:38: Gnosticism, Postmodernism, and the Danger of "What Does This Mean to You?"Spiritualizing texts vs. discovering authorial intent. Words carry meaning; Scripture is God-breathed (2 Tim 3:16-17; 2 Pet 1:20-21).
* 35:38 – 46:07: Inspiration – God-Breathed and LivingWarnings against adding/subtracting (Deut 4:2; Prov 30:5-6). Howard Hendricks on clear passages convicting us. Artistic/musical analogies for inspiration (including drug-free vs. drug-influenced experiences).
* 46:07 – 50:55: Traditions vs. Scripture; Pharisaic ErrorsGreek Orthodox/Mennonite/Amish examples. Jesus rebuking traditions that void God's Word. Reformation cry: Sola Scriptura over accumulated human traditions.
* 50:55 – 1:02:48: Personal Encounters with False TeachersBill's philosophy prof and "Bible as literature only"; Corey's youth group infiltrator. Subtle control tactics and 2 Timothy 4.
* 1:02:48 – 1:14:20: More on False Teachers, Calvin, and Primary SourcesCalvin refuting "extreme Calvinism"; divisions (1 Cor 3); reading primary sources (Institutes). Strong call to test everything Berean-style (1 Thess 5:21; 1 John 4:1).
* 1:14:20 – 1:29:15: Standing Firm – Courage, Gentleness, and ApplicationGalatians 1:10 (pleasing God, not man); 2 Tim 2:24-25 (patient instruction); James 1 (doers of the Word). Humility, teachability, and rejecting hubris.
* 1:29:15 – 1:42:06: General Revelation, Beauty, and God's AuthorityNatural order, math/music of the universe (Kepler's Harmonies), image-bearers. Ties to Reformation appreciation for God's sovereignty in creation.
* 1:42:06 – End: Satan's Tactics, Repentance, and SalvationDoubt ("Did God actually say?"), wolves in sheep's clothing, scoffing (2 Pet 3), sensual lures, and the call to courageous, gentle fidelity. Ends with hope in the cross and salvation.
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