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The Bible Confirms Itself

NBTT

Member
Joined
Jan 14, 2026
Messages
133
Here's a visual representation (source) of how the bible confirms itself. It is a graph of 63,779 cross references between different books of the bible. It is practically impossible for an author to self reference himself multiple times without creating contradictions and/or dilemmas. See how the quran fails this test in this other thread. For tens of authors to pull this off over centuries in a handful of languages is enough to make you believe in the Holy Spirit inspiring the bible.

BibleVizArc7WiderOTNTsmall.png


This reminds me of the story a man exploring the jungle and is captured by a tribe who condemns him to death. The chief asks the man for his last words saying if your last words are true you will die quickly with a spear to the heart. If your last words are false you will die slowly by torture. After a moment of reflection the man stated "I will die by torture". The chief being a man of his word was forced to release the man.

Bible critics often accuse Christians of circular arguments by using the bible to support itself. When the number of self-references becomes this extreme yet the bible remains coherent, consistent and true, self-reference becomes and incredibly powerful strength instead of a weakness.

PS.
The bar chart that runs along the bottom represents all of the chapters in the Bible, starting with Genesis 1 on the left. Books alternate in color between light and dark gray, with the first book of the Old and New Testaments in white. The length of each bar denotes the number of verses in that chapter (for instance, the longest bar is the longest chapter in the Bible, Psalm 119). Each of the 63,779 cross references found in the Bible are depicted by a single arc - the color corresponds to the distance between the two chapters, creating a rainbow-like effect.
 
Take a look at a very similar but circular graph of the catholic bible that includes the apocrypha. It becomes very clear that the additional section of that bible doesn't belong.

Here's the Instagram link to the image.

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I received this diagram from a cousin through WhatsApp (unknown author). It represents the incredible interconnection between Bible books.

But there is an important detail to consider in this diagram: the Bible represented here is a Catholic Bible, which includes the books known to Catholics as “Deuterocanonical” (or “second canon”) and to Protestants as “Apocrypha” or “Pseudepigrapha” (books of falsely attributed authorship or titles). These books were added later by the Catholic Church as a way to support certain doctrines that had been developed over time.

Although they appear between Malachi and Matthew in this Bible — as shown in the diagram — it’s important to note that they were never accepted by the Jews as part of the Old Testament canon. And since Paul states that the oracles of God were entrusted to the Jews (Romans 3:2), Protestants understand that the canon recognized by the Jews is the one that should be followed — that is, without the later additions.

This is why Protestants adhere to the Jewish Old Testament and do not recognize these additional books as inspired. The term “Apocrypha” means “hidden” or “lacking canonical authority.”

Now, look again at the diagram: notice how the books of the Bible are deeply and coherently interconnected. Also observe that the added books show very little or almost no connection with the rest of Scripture. This lack of integration is further evidence that these books do not belong to the biblical canon.
 
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