It Is Written

Who's Your Daddy?

Three Angels Broadcasting Network

Program transcript

Participants: John Bradshaw

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Series Code: IIW

Program Code: IIW001318


00:00 [Music]
00:07 Jesus is talking with His disciples one day and He says
00:09 to Philip, "He who has seen Me has seen the Father.
00:12 That's John 14:9.
00:14 On Father's Day - Happy Father's Day, Dads - some
00:18 people reflect on the fact that they didn't have a great
00:20 father while they grew up.
00:21 Gone too much, to angry, violent, abusive... Tragic.
00:25 But there's a Father you can love, and even if your earthly
00:28 father didn't give you a perfect picture of what
00:30 a Dad should be, Jesus said that if you want to know what
00:33 God the Father is like, just look at Jesus.
00:36 Jesus reveals what our Heavenly Father is really
00:39 like.
00:40 He4s kind, patient, merciful, forgiving, accepting,
00:44 healing, uplifting...
00:46 If you want to know what the Father is like, look at
00:48 Jesus.
00:49 And when you do that, you'll agree that you DO
00:52 have a Father you can love and trust.
00:55 I'm John Bradshaw for It Is Written.
00:57 Let's live today by Every Word.
01:00 [music]
01:05 [Theme Music]
01:11 It has stood the test of time.
01:16 God's book, the Bible.
01:21 Still relevant in today's complex world.
01:26 It Is Written sharing hope around the globe.
01:40 Imagine growing up thinking you were someone, and then
01:43 discovering you were someone else.
01:46 And imagine if you found out your own godfather was one
01:48 of the monsters of history.
01:50 Guntram Weber was a 63-year-old teacher living
01:53 in Berlin, West Germany.
01:54 Like many Germans his age, he never knew his father,
01:59 and that was because his dad was killed during the war.
02:01 Or, at least that's what his mother told him.
02:04 "Guntram, your dad was a truck driver for the Luftwaffe
02:06 in Croatia and he died in the fighting."
02:09 And that's all she told him.
02:11 For much of his life, Guntram remained skeptical
02:14 about what his mother had said regarding his father.
02:16 He could never quite bring himself to believe her story.
02:20 It always bothered him that she never talked about his
02:22 father, and when he asked questions, she would say
02:24 something quickly and then change the subject.
02:27 And to make things seem even more suspicious, there were
02:29 never any photos of his dad around the house, and he
02:32 couldn't find any documentation.
02:34 Then one day, following a hint his stepfather gave him,
02:37 Guntram did a little digging into his past, and much to his
02:40 shock he found the truth.
02:43 Guntram was what they called a Lebensborn baby, a term
02:47 the Nazis used to describe their plan to use selective
02:50 breeding to create a Master Aryan race that would
02:54 eventually rule the world.
02:55 They'd pick out what they considered to be the most
02:57 Aryan-looking and racially pure men and women, and under
03:01 the direction of the SS and Heinrich Himmler, they ran
03:04 a special program where those people were essentially sent
03:07 to breeding farms around Europe to give birth
03:10 to supposedly racially pure children.
03:13 And when Guntram went to find the truth about his dad,
03:16 that's what he discovered.
03:18 His dad wasn't a lorry driver killed in Croatia.
03:21 He was a Major-General in the SS who had a wife and three
03:24 children of his own when he got Guntram's mother pregnant.
03:28 His mother then went to one of the "Lebensborn" clinics,
03:31 and thus Guntram came into the world.
03:34 His real father was deemed a war criminal and had to flee
03:37 to Argentina after the war, where he lived until his death
03:40 in 1970.
03:42 But as bad as that was, it wasn't the only dark
03:45 secret in his life.
03:46 He discovered, to his horror, that Heinrich Himmler,
03:50 the infamous director of the death camps,
03:53 was his godfather.
03:54 Imagine: thinking one thing about your origins all your
03:57 life, and then discovering the horrible truth: your
04:02 birth was a part of a systematic eugenics program.
04:06 Thousands of Germans, after the war, suffered
04:09 the trauma of making that very discovery.
04:13 [Music] Some of the most basic questions people ask
04:15 during the course of their lifetime are things like "Who
04:17 am I?", and "Why am I here?"
04:25 Anybody who lives long enough and gives life even a few
04:28 moments of serious thought is going to ask those kinds
04:31 of questions.
04:33 [music] ...
04:44 In his book Anna Karenina, Leo Tolstoy presents
04:46 a Russian aristocrat by the name of Konstantin
04:49 Levin who asks three essential questions: (1) What am I?
04:53 (2) Where am I?, and (3) Why am I here?
05:03 As the story goes, Konstantin was looking at his estate
05:06 when he suddenly wonders: what does it all mean?
05:10 "When these people are all dead, and I'm dead, too -
05:12 what will all of this mean?"
05:15 I had a conversation once with a philophosy professor
05:18 in London, England once told me that philosophers still
05:21 wrestle with the big questions.
05:23 I said "Michael, what are those big questions?" And he told me:
05:25 "Here are the big questions we are trying to get
05:27 to the bottom of.
05:28 Who am I?
05:30 Why am I here?
05:32 There's something in the human heart that cries
05:34 desperately to know what life is all about.
05:37 What a waste to live here without knowing why you're
05:41 here and how you're supposed to spend your time.
05:44 Most people wander through life not knowing what their
05:48 life really means.
05:49 And then, when it's too late they discover what they could
05:55 have done.
05:56 So let me ask you: how, exactly, are you supposed to
05:59 live your life if you don't know why you're here or where
06:03 you come from?
06:05 Richard Dawkins, the famous Oxford zoologist and atheist,
06:08 believes quite strongly that he's got the answer.
06:11 He says that we are cosmic accidents created by chance
06:15 through the unconscious mechanism of random mutation
06:18 and natural selection.
06:20 In other words, more conscious thought and purpose
06:23 went into somebody scribbling some graffiti under a bridge
06:26 than went into the creation of you and me - or the whole
06:29 universe even.
06:30 But look at the world around you: everything seems to have
06:34 a purpose.
06:35 Ears have purpose, the brain of a dolphin has a purpose,
06:39 the sun has a purpose, the DNA of a flower has purpose,
06:43 and yet we're being asked to believe that everything
06:46 around us is an accident and has no purpose at all?
06:50 After more than a century of evolutionary theory being
06:53 taught in the classroom, millions and millions
06:57 of Americans still don't believe it.
07:00 Most of us still believe that God purposely created us -
07:04 in His image.
07:05 All the hypotheses and speculations out there about
07:08 there being a "the selfish gene," or about "natural
07:12 selection," or about primordial soup - just don't
07:15 make the same kind of sense found in the first words of
07:18 the Bible: Genesis 1:1 says, "n the beginning God created
07:25 the heavens and the earth" You know, in those few words,
07:29 we have a radically different perspective on the question
07:33 of life than the stuff we learned in high school
07:35 biology.
07:37 Are we really just the chance product of cold cosmic forces
07:40 who never even saw us coming?
07:42 Or are we the purposeful creation of a loving God who
07:46 made us, as the Bible says, in His own image?
07:50 There's quite a stark contrast between those two
07:53 views.
07:54 Guntram Weber thought he had it pretty bad, having
07:58 Heinrich Himmler as his godfather.
08:00 But at least his life had some sort of misguided design
08:03 to it.
08:04 As bad as the picture was, I think it's even worse
08:07 to be told that your great-great-great-great-grand
08:09 father was a single-celled organism coming out
08:13 of a primordial soup.
08:15 Suddenly, your life has got no kind of meaning at all.
08:21 Now let me ask you this question: Can a painting of a
08:24 water lily suddenly become an actual water lily?
08:30 Are you sure you know the answer to that question?
08:33 I'll bring that answer to you in just a moment.
08:38 [Music]
08:53 Time for today's Bible question and thanks for
08:55 submitting Bible questions to us at It Is Written.
08:57 How can a person really believe the Bible is true?
09:02 It was written years ago, it has been copied so many
09:04 times, it was written by a lot of different people
09:07 and those people wrote different parts of the Bible
09:10 at different times.
09:12 Help me believe the Bible is believable.
09:15 Great question.
09:16 Thank you.
09:17 I'll do my best.
09:18 You know what's funny?
09:20 There are historical books that not many people question
09:23 when it comes to authenticity.
09:25 Let me explain this a bit.
09:27 A historian named Tacitus wrote The Annals of Imperial
09:30 Rome.
09:31 Few people question its accuracy or its veracity,
09:34 even though what is available today comes from a copy and
09:39 doesn't NEARLY date back to the original.
09:41 Now I'm not knocking Tacitus at all - just pointing out
09:46 that there's a bit of a double standard when it comes
09:48 to considering the accuracy of the Bible.
09:51 Now there are several reasons you can trust the Bible.
09:53 I'll name just a few.
09:55 Historically it stands up.
09:57 Luke, who wrote Luke and the Book of Acts, is a very
10:00 accurate historian, and the historical details found in
10:03 what he wrote stand the test of thorough scrutiny.
10:07 Archaeology has validated the Bible again and again.
10:11 On numerous occasions it has been said that portions of
10:13 the Bible couldn't be trusted because they couldn't be
10:16 validated by the archaeological record.
10:18 But again and again archaeologists have found
10:21 records of cities or other evidences that show the Bible
10:26 record was accurate after all.
10:29 It has happened many, many times.
10:32 Then there are the manuscripts.
10:34 There are hundreds of old manuscripts or portions of
10:37 manuscripts that show us that what has come down to us
10:40 today is consistent with what was written hundreds and
10:43 hundreds of years ago.
10:45 Tthe Dead Sea Scrolls, discovered in the late 1940s
10:48 and early 1950s are compelling evidence that the
10:51 Bible is legitimate.
10:52 They date back as far back as before the time of Christ,
10:57 and they show us that the Bible we read today is
10:59 fundamentally the same as what was written way back
11:01 then.
11:03 Now the 'differences' that exist in manuscripts are
11:05 generally so small that they're just irrelevant.
11:10 You don't find a manuscript where Jesus says He is not
11:13 the Son of God, or where Christ is teaching something
11:16 bizarre.
11:17 And consider prophecy.
11:18 Many prophecies of the Bible are being fulfilled and this
11:20 demonstrates I think, conclusively, that the Bible
11:22 can be trusted.
11:25 When you've got predictions made that name a king before
11:28 he is born or that name a certain invader or conquerer
11:31 before he is born and then these things come to pass...
11:34 When you have got all those prophecies about Jesus coming
11:38 to the world one saying He would be crucified, another
11:40 saying not a bone would be broken, another saying He
11:43 would be born in Bethlehem, another saying He would die
11:46 in dishonour, another saying He would be rejected by the
11:49 ones He came to save, and on and on...
11:52 You've got a real problem if you want to argue against the
11:56 inspiration of the Bible.
11:57 What are you going to do with all that evidence?
12:02 But you know what?
12:03 At the end of the day we accept the Bible by faith.
12:07 The Bible's critics do raise fair questions at times -
12:10 sometimes questions aren't very easy to answer,
12:12 especially to everybody's satisfaction.
12:14 But there's enough clear - what I would call -
12:18 "evidence" for us to know that the Bible really is the
12:22 word of God.
12:23 You can accept it by faith.
12:24 Not blind faith, but reasonable, studied faith.
12:28 There are many, many good reasons to trust the Bible.
12:31 So many I"m not sure how someone can really
12:35 be confident in rejecting the Bible.
12:39 If there's a question you would like answered, pleae
12:41 send it to me at ItIsWritten.com.
12:43 I'll do my very best to get your question answered.
12:48 [Music]
12:55 Planning for your financial future is a vital aspect
12:57 of Christian Stewardship.
12:59 For this reason, It Is Written is pleased to offer free
13:02 planned giving and estate services.
13:04 For information on how we can help you, please call
13:06 1.800.992.2219.
13:10 To receive additional material on the advantages of life
13:13 income plans such as a charitable gift annuity,
13:17 which can provide you with tax benefits and income for life,
13:19 call today or visit our special website,
13:23 www.hislegacy.com.
13:26 You could also write to: It Is Written, Planned Giving
13:29 and Trust Services, Box O, Thousand Oaks,
13:32 California, 91359.
13:35 Our toll-free number again is 1.800.992.2219.
13:40 And our web address is www.hislegacy.com.
13:48 You know, one of the great puzzles of modern science is
13:52 the question of life itself: where, exactly, did it come
13:55 from?
13:57 How did these chemical products - water, carbon,
14:01 and protein how did they make
14:03 the jump from being - well, water, carbon, and protein
14:07 - to a living thing?
14:09 The idea of a painting of a water lily suddenly
14:12 becoming a real water lily seems impossible.
14:16 How would the painting make that kind of jump?
14:19 It's not just a small tweak here and there and then
14:21 suddenly the painting comes to life!
14:23 It just doesn't seem feasible.
14:25 But the old, old story you find the Bible DOES seem
14:29 feasible.
14:30 God CREATED life with purpose and design - and with human
14:36 beings, He took special steps to make something very
14:39 special.
14:40 Listen to what the Bible says, in Genesis 2:7 "and the
14:46 LORD God formed man of the dust of the ground, and
14:49 breathed into his nostrils the breath of life; and man
14:53 became a living soul" (Genesis 2:7).
14:57 I want you to notice the intimacy: it says God
15:00 breathed into our nostrils the breath of life.
15:02 According to the Biblical account, it wasn't an
15:05 accident.
15:06 Someone who cares deeply about our existence
15:09 put us here on purpose, for a reason.
15:12 Now take that version of human origins and contrast it
15:15 with what the late paleontologist Stephen Jay
15:19 Gould said about human origins: He said, "We are
15:23 here because one odd group of fishes had a peculiar fin
15:27 anatomy that could transform into legs for terrestrial
15:31 creatures; because the earth never froze entirely during
15:36 the ice age; because a small and tenuous species, arising
15:41 in Africa a quarter of a million years ago, has
15:44 managed, so far, to survive by hook and by crook.
15:49 We may yearn for a 'higher' answer - but none exists."
15:56 I can't imagine anything more hopeless - and when it comes
16:00 to the really important questions in life, it just
16:03 doesn't bring any lasting satisfaction.
16:06 And with all due respect, how could Dr. Gould be so
16:09 certain?
16:10 He just wasn't there when it supposedly happened.
16:13 He didn't see any of his hypothesis take place.
16:16 Instead, he took a few bits of scattered data - a little
16:20 piece here, a little piece there - and then building on
16:24 a whole bunch of unproven assumptions, he cooked up
16:27 a theory of human origins that just doesn't really
16:30 make sense.
16:31 When I listen to people like Dawkins and Gould, and all
16:34 these other people who seem to insist that life is an
16:37 accident, it reminds me of a passage in the book of Job
16:41 where God asks some pretty tough questions.
16:45 I'm turning to the book of Job, Chapter 38 and verse 4,
16:49 Job 38:4 and it says this, Where were you when I laid
16:55 the foundations of the earth?
16:57 Tell Me, if you have understanding.
17:00 Who determined its measurements?
17:03 Surely you know or who stretched the line upon it?
17:08 Just try to imagine standing in front of God, attempting
17:12 to answer questions like this.
17:14 And the rest of the chapter has a lot more questions.
17:17 The point of it is really pretty simple: none of us
17:20 were there.
17:21 We're building a theory of human origins from scratch,
17:24 based on a tiny bits of information and a whole lot
17:28 of human arrogance.
17:30 You know, I've heard people say that it's arrogant to
17:32 suggest that human life is special, and that Christians
17:36 are arrogant to suggest that people have a special place
17:38 on planet earth, but sometimes I really have to
17:42 wonder: when we want to be smart enough to think that we
17:46 think we hold the key to the universe, and we're too proud
17:49 to think that Someone might just have a claim on our
17:52 lives, where does the real arrogance lie?
17:57 And in the view offered by Dawkins and Darwin and Gould,
18:01 the universe doesn't last.
18:03 Follow these guys' theories to their logical conclusion,
18:06 and you get a pretty hopeless picture.
18:09 Eventually, the universe just collapses - and nothing will
18:13 have meant anything.
18:15 But the story given in the Bible bubbless with hope.
18:19 It admits the sad condition of our planet, it explains
18:23 the pain and suffering we're living with, and it holds out
18:26 a promise that answers the toughest questions we can
18:29 ask.
18:30 To put it simply, God offers us a future.
18:34 Listen to His promise, it's found at the end of the book
18:36 of Isaiah: For, behold, I create new heavens and a new
18:42 earth: and the former shall not be remembered, nor come into
18:46 mind" (Isaiah 65:17).
18:47 If life were really meaningless, I don't think so
18:50 many people - for so many years - would have asked so
18:53 many questions.
18:55 If you and I are just machines that fell together
18:57 by accident, why would we even care about the meaning
19:01 of life.
19:02 But if our lives are the creation of a loving, caring
19:05 God, who has our best in mind, the questions you've
19:08 got about life begin to make sense.
19:12 They're kind of a homing beacon, steering you back
19:14 into a relationship with God.
19:17 Now in the book of Ephesians, the Bible says, Ephesians 1,
19:21 He chose us in Him before the foundation of the world,
19:25 that we should be holy and without blame before Him...."
19:29 (Eph. 1:4) You didn't just happen:
19:32 you were chosen, and you still are.
19:36 Because of what God did for you at the cross of Calvary,
19:38 you are free to answer the call in your heart and
19:41 rediscover your original purpose.
19:44 Here's another passage found in 2 Timothy 1:9, where the
19:48 Bible tells us that you and I have been called, with a
19:53 holy calling, not according to our works, but according
19:57 to His own purpose and grace which was given to us in
20:00 Christ Jesus before time began." Over and over again,
20:05 the Bible says that you were chosen, you were called
20:09 before the creation of the world.
20:11 There's a reason you wonder about the meaning of your
20:13 life.
20:14 Dig a little deeper into your past, and you're going to
20:17 make a remarkable discovery: your life really does have
20:22 purpose.
20:23 You were put here intentionally, and there are
20:26 forces at work in this universe to keep you from
20:29 discovering the truth.
20:32 In a moment, an incredible story about two men who found
20:35 out who they really were.
20:42 Eyes for India is giving sight to the blind and you can be
20:46 a part of this amazing work that God is doing.
20:49 Fifteen million blind people live in India, more than any
20:52 other country in the world, and many of the blind in India
20:55 could see again, if only they could have simple
20:58 cataract surgery.
21:00 It Is Written is making that happen.
21:03 Would you support Eyes for India?
21:06 For just $75 you would be giving the gift of sight to someone
21:10 who desperately wants to see.
21:13 Here is all you need to do.
21:15 Call 1.800.253.3000 to donate and support Eyes for India
21:22 or you can write to It Is Written,
21:24 Box O, Thousand Oaks, California 91359.
21:28 You'll also find Eyes for India on-line
21:31 at itiswritten.com.
21:36 Somebody doesn't want you to know who you really are.
21:40 You know, a little while ago, I came across a remarkable
21:42 story.
21:43 In the state of Maine, there were two men - Gary and Randy
21:46 - working at the same furniture company.
21:48 Customers and coworkers alike couldn't help but notice that
21:51 they two guys looked a lot alike.
21:53 Both of them had light hair, both of them had stocky
21:55 builds, and both of them wore baseball caps and had
21:59 goatees.
22:00 Their mannerisms and appearance were so much alike that people
22:02 used to ask if they were brothers.
22:04 But of course, they weren't - because if they were
22:07 brothers, they would have grown up together, right?
22:10 Then one day Randy asked Gary if he knew the names of his
22:12 biological parents, and to his surprise, they were the
22:16 same as his biological parents.
22:19 And the fact that they were both adopted really started
22:21 raising some important questions.
22:24 Randy knew that he had a brother out there somewhere,
22:27 and so he asked Gary what his birthday was.
22:30 It was June 10, 1974 - the same year that his brother
22:34 had been born.
22:35 Now think about this very carefully: what are the odds
22:39 that two brothers actually worked together in the same
22:42 company all those years, and didn't realize that they were
22:46 brothers?
22:47 What twists of fate had to happen to bring them both
22:50 together on the same payroll - and how many days - weeks -
22:55 years , had actually been wasted because they didn't
22:59 realize just how close their family really was?
23:03 And now think about yourself here on planet earth.
23:11 Your heart tells you that your life is important.
23:14 You've got this overwhelming sense that you were put here
23:16 for a reason.
23:18 You might struggle to know what that reason is, but you
23:22 just can't shake the feeling.
23:26 Maybe at night, you look up at the stars, wondering if
23:28 Somebody is really out there.
23:32 Maybe, in the quiet moments of your life life, you find
23:35 yourself wanting to talk to Someone - wanting to have a
23:38 relationship.
23:41 In every human heart, there's this feeling that we've been
23:43 disconnected - that we're missing out on the most
23:46 important relationship in the world.
23:49 Some people describe it as feeling a little bit homesick
23:52 - as if we recognize that we really belong somewhere else,
23:55 in a different set of circumstances.
23:58 That feeling, according to the Bible, is universal.
24:01 In Ecclesiastes 3:11, the Bible says that God has put
24:06 eternity in the heart.
24:12 In the last century and a half, there have been a lot of
24:15 voices telling us that our existence doesn't mean
24:18 anything.
24:20 But after all this time, they're failing to convince
24:23 us.
24:24 The call in your heart just won't go away.
24:26 New theories of human origins have failed to kill the cry
24:29 of our hearts to know who we really are.
24:32 And who are we?
24:34 We are beings purposefully made in the image of God, who
24:39 promised us eternal life with Him long before the world
24:43 even began.
24:45 So right now, only one more question remains: Are you
24:49 going to claim your meaningful life with God?
24:53 According to the Bible, it's yours for the asking -
24:56 and when you ask, you're going to discover
25:00 that He's been there all along.
25:02 It's just that maybe you didn't recognize Him.
25:05 But will you recognize Him right now?
25:08 Let's pray.
25:09 We will thank God that he made us for a purpose.
25:12 He made us in his image and he made both you and me
25:17 so that we might spend eternity with him.
25:22 Our Father in heaven, we thank you that we
25:24 are not just accidents.
25:25 We thank you that life is not meaningless, but that it is
25:29 full of purpose.
25:30 And we pray claiming your purpose for our life right
25:34 now.
25:35 You made us and not just to live and die, but you made us
25:40 to live on this earth and then die or not, live
25:44 eternally with you forever in the place where it is good
25:48 where the flowers don't ever fade and when we will enjoy
25:52 and where we will enjoy meaning and purpose beyond
25:56 our ability right now to comprehend and so we thank
26:00 you that you are our father and that we are yours.
26:03 We belong to you and we are glad and we pray in Jesus'
26:08 name, amen.
26:22 [Music]
26:38 Perhaps our program today has touched your heart and
26:40 impressed you with a personal need for deeper Bible study.
26:44 If you desire to listen to God and follow where he
26:46 leads, we've got a wonderful resource that can help you do
26:49 that in a systemic way, the Discover Bible Guides.
26:54 These study guides will take you through the essential
26:56 truths taught in Scripture.
26:57 They give you the big picture showing how it all fits
27:00 together.
27:01 The Discover Bible Guides are a wonderful way for you to
27:04 become grounded in the Word of God and to see how Jesus
27:07 Christ relates to all the areas of our lives.
27:11 Please call or write us and the Discover Bible Guides
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27:16 If you live in North America, we'll mail these Bible guides
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27:19 Or for even easier and immediate access from
27:22 anywhere around the world, you can get these wonderful
27:24 Bible lessons on our website itiswritten.com.
27:28 Request the Discover Bible Guides by calling our toll
27:31 free number 1 800 253 3000.
27:35 Call right now You can also request today's
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27:41 Thousand Oaks, CA 91359.
27:46 Thanks for joining me today.
27:47 And remember It Is Written: man shall not live by bread
27:52 alone, but by every word that proceeds from the mouth of
27:56 God.


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Revised 2015-02-05