The Book That Built the World
"You are the light of the world. A city set on a hill cannot be hidden."
Before you ever ask whether the Bible is reliable, it is worth pausing to notice what this book has actually done in the world. It is not a fragile religious text that has barely survived. It is the engine of the modern moral imagination, and you are living inside its fruit.
Think of William Wilberforce, the British Member of Parliament who encountered Jesus while reading the Bible and then spent the rest of his life fighting to end the British slave trade. Think of Florence Nightingale, the founder of modern nursing, who was a daily Bible reader. Think of Elizabeth Fry teaching the women of Newgate Prison to read from a Bible. Robert Raikes opening the first Sunday schools that became the model for England's public-education system. Martin Luther King, Jr. quoting the prophet Amos in front of the Lincoln Memorial. Archbishop Desmond Tutu standing against apartheid in South Africa.
Different centuries, different continents, different denominations — Catholic, Protestant, Orthodox — all reading the same book, drawing the same conclusion: every human being is made in the image of God, and that fact is non-negotiable. From that single biblical claim came hospitals, schools, abolition movements, civil rights, the very idea that all people have inherent dignity. Take that claim out of the West's moral DNA and you do not have the West.
Jesus said you are the light of the world — a city on a hill that cannot be hidden. That is not just true of you individually. It has been true of His people across the centuries. The Bible has not been a quiet text. It has not stayed inside the walls of monasteries. It has spilled out into hospitals, parliaments, schoolrooms, and prisons. And it has shaped your life in ways you may not have stopped to notice.
Before you can ask whether the Bible is reliable, ask whether you have honored the fruit of the book you already hold. Today, look around your city. The hospital with the saint's name on the door. The university someone founded with a Bible in hand. The freedom you take for granted to assemble and worship. That is not a coincidence. That is the city on a hill, doing what Jesus said it would do.
Today's reading: Matthew 5
Reflect: Look around your city today. What is one institution, freedom, or moral instinct that exists because someone, somewhere, was shaped by the Bible?