“Every word of God is pure: he is a shield unto them that put their trust in him.” (Proverbs 30:5)
When
the inspired writer of Proverbs testified here that God’s Word was
“pure,” he did not use the usual word for, say, moral purity or metallic
purity. Instead, he asserted in effect that every word of God had been
refined and purified, as it were in a spiritual furnace, so that any and
all contaminants had been purged out, leaving only the pure element.
The same truth is found in the great psalm of the Scriptures (Psalm 119). “Thy word is very pure: therefore thy servant loveth it” (Psalm 119:140).
David used the same word in another psalm, where it is translated
“tried” in the sense of “tested for purity.” “As for God, his way is
perfect: the word of the LORD is tried. He is a buckler to all those
that trust in him” (Psalm 18:30).
The word for “buckler” in this verse is the same as for “shield” in our
text. Thus, God equips with a perfect shield against the weapons of any
foe, because “His way is perfect” and “every word” in Scripture has
been made “pure” before the Spirit of God approved its use by the human
writer.
This surely tells us that the human writer of Scripture (that is, Moses
or David or John or whomever), with all his human proneness to mistakes
or other inadequacies, was so controlled by the Holy Spirit that
whatever he actually wrote had been purged of any such deficiencies.
Thus, his final written text had been made perfectly “pure,” free from
any defects. This control applies to “every word,” so that we can
legitimately refer to the Scriptures as verbally inspired and inerrant
throughout.
As the apostle Paul stressed, our spiritual armor in the battle against
evil is “the shield of faith” and “the sword of the Spirit, which is
the word of God” (Ephesians 6:16-17). HMM
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