John 8:31-41 · The Children of Abraham
The Truth about Truth
John 8:31-32
Sermon
by James Merritt
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I honestly don't believe that I will ever preach a more important sermon than this one. I hope after I introduce my topic, your ears will perk up, your back will straighten up, your eyes will light up, and you will focus your attention on me with laser-like intensity.

Listen carefully to the next three statements:

  • There are no absolutes.
  • All truth is relative.
  • You have no right to force your idea of right and wrong on anyone else.

Currently, sixty-two percent of American adults believe these statements to be true. If young people between the ages of eighteen and twenty-five are included, the figure rises from sixty-two to sixty-four percent.1

For the first time in the history of this nation, we are living in a society that is rejecting the notion of absolute truth. But not only is it true in society, it is also true in the schools. The late professor, Allan Bloom, who wrote the magnificent book, The Closing of the American Mind, made this statement:

There is one thing a professor can be absolutely certain of: Almost every student entering the university believes, or says he believes, that truth is relative. If this belief is put to the test, one can count on the students' reaction: they will be uncomprehending that anyone should regard the proposition as not self-evident astonishes them as though he were calling into question 2 + 2 = 4.2

Now that may not surprise you too much, but the real shocker is that not only is this true for society and the schools, but it is becoming increasingly true for the saints. One researcher has found that although 88% of people in evangelical churches say the Bible is the infallible Word of God, 53% say there is no such thing as absolute truth! Well, what is even more alarming is that the percentage of youth in our evangelical churches who do not believe in absolute truth, is the same percentage as the youth who do not even attend church.3

Steve Turner, a noted British journalist, wrote a tongue-in-cheek view of what might be called, "The Apostle's Creed" of the humanist. He has captured the spirit of our age perfectly:

We today believe in Marx, Freud, and Darwin (the holy trinity). We believe everything is okay, as long as you don't hurt anyone, to the best of your definition of "hurt," and to the best of your definition of "knowledge." We believe in sex before, during, and after marriage. We believe in the therapy of sin. We believe that taboos are taboo. We believe that everything is getting better despite evidence to the contrary. The evidence must be investigated, and you can prove anything with evidence. We believe there is something in horoscopes, UFOs and bent spoons. Jesus was a good man, just like Buddha, Mohammed, and ourselves. He was a good moral teacher although we think his good morals were really bad.

We believe that all religions are basically the same at least the ones that we read were. They all believe in love and goodness. They only differ on matters of creation, sin, heaven, hell, God, and salvation. We believe that after death comes nothing, because when you ask the dead what happened, they say nothing. If death is not the end then the dead have lied, and it is compulsory heaven for all except perhaps for Hitler, Stalin, and Genghis Kahn.

We believe in Masters and Johnson. What's selected is average, and what's average is normal, and what's normal is good. We believe in total disarmament. We believe there are direct links between warfare and bloodshed...we believe that man is essentially good: it's only his behavior that lets him down. This (of course) is the fault of society. Society is the fault of conditions, and conditions are the fault of society. We believe that each man must find the truth that is right for him and reality will adapt accordingly. The universe will readjust, history will alter. We believe there is no absolute truth except the truth that there is no absolute truth.4

In the last twenty years America has undergone a moral lobotomy. I saw a cartoon in U.S.A. Today once. It was a picture of a young George Washington holding a hatchet in one hand, kneeling next to a felled cherry tree. He's looking up at his father and saying, "Dad, my teacher says I cannot tell a lie, I cannot tell the truth, and I cannot tell the difference." That is exactly what we are teaching this generation.

Tolerance is the buzzword of the 90s. Heterosexuals are to be tolerant of homosexuality. Pro-lifers are to be tolerant of abortion. Christians are to be tolerant of immorality.

Why are we called intolerant, arrogant, bigots, and extremists? I can tell you in one sentence why we believe in truth.

I have become convinced that much of so-called tolerance is simply a cloak for cowardly hypocrisy. There is no room for tolerance in the chemical laboratory. Water is composed of two parts hydrogen and one part oxygen. The slightest deviation from that formula is forbidden.

There is no room for tolerance in music. The skilled director will not permit the first violin to play even so much as one half note off of the written note, chord, or key.

There is no room for tolerance in mathematics. Neither geometry, calculus, nor trigonometry allows any variation from exact accuracy. The solution of the problem is either right or it's wrong.

There is no room for tolerance in biology. One varying result out of a thousand experiments invalidates the entire theory.

There is no room for tolerance on the athletic field. The game is to be played according to the rules with no favoritism shown to anybody.

There is no room for tolerance in the garage. The mechanic says the piston rings must fit the cylinder walls within one thousandth part of an inch if the engine is to run smoothly.

Yet, we are told that when it comes to morality, and righteousness, and holiness, we ought to be tolerant. Well, I say when it comes to salvation, heaven, hell, homosexuality, abortion, pornography, obscenity, right and wrong, the word is not tolerance, the word is truth.

If there is no such thing as truth, Jesus was both a liar and a fool. For He said, "For this cause I was born, and for this cause I have come into the world, that I should bear witness to the truth." (Jn. 18:37) In this statement we are going to study in John 18, Jesus tells us the truth about truth.

I. The Real Principle of Truth

Jesus did not say "You shall know a truth," but "You shall know the truth." The Lord Jesus said there is truth that is absolute.

Where is this truth found? Jesus also said, "Your word is truth." (Jn. 17:17) He said the Bible is the source of ultimate absolute truth. Now why is the Bible the source of truth? Because it is the word of God. Now the word of God is what God says. What God says is truth. God does not say something because it's true; a thing is true because God says it.

The very first lie that was ever told was told by the devil in the garden of Eden, when he said, "Has God said?" The greatest liar told the greatest lie about the greatest truth. He knew what he was doing. Because once he got Eve to doubt God's word, he then convinced Eve to disobey God.

Abraham Lincoln once said, "I have but to say, the Bible is the best gift God has given to man. All the good Savior gave to the world was communicated through this book. But for it we could not know right from wrong."5

You take away the word of God, and the God of the word, you take away the basis of morality, purity, and holiness. Without God and the Bible, right and wrong becomes just a matter of personal opinion.

I heard about two men who got into an argument, and they could not settle the matter between themselves. So they both agreed they would go to a very wise man who lived in that town and let him settle the dispute for them.

The next day one of the men went to see this wise man, sat down with him and explained his side of the story. The wise man looked at him and said, "You are exactly right." With a smug and a satisfied look, the man left.

The next day the other man came to see the wise man, sat down and shared his side of the story. The wise man looked at him and said, "You are absolutely right." With a smug and a satisfied look, this man got up and left.

The wise man's wife who had overheard both conversations, came into the room and confronted her husband. She said, "One man came into this room with one story, another man came into this room with another story; you told both of them they were absolutely right." She said, "Now you know both of those men cannot be right."

The husband looked at his wife, and said, "You are absolutely right."

Without God and the Bible, everybody is right and everybody is wrong. Nobody is right and nobody is wrong. Because right and wrong can only be determined by one thing truth. The Bible says two things about truth:

a. It Is Timeless In Its Existence

Psalm 100:5 says, "His truth endures to all generations." Truth that is absolute never becomes obsolete. What was true a million years ago will be true a million years from now. Homosexuality was wrong two thousand years ago; it will be wrong two thousand years from now. Abortion was murder two thousand years ago; it will be murder two thousand years from now. Adultery was sinful two thousand years ago; it will be sinful two thousand years from now.

Someone has said that truth has been tampered with, and tinkered with, redecorated and camouflaged, but truth has not changed.

I read a story of a man who went by to see his old friend, a music teacher. He said to him, "What's the good news today?" The old teacher was silent as he stood up and walked across the room, picked up a hammer, and struck a tuning fork. As the note sounded out through the room he said, "That is A. It is A today; it was A five thousand years ago, and it will be A ten thousand years from now. The soprano upstairs sings off key; the tenor across the hall flattens out his high notes; the piano downstairs is out of tune." He then struck the note again and said, "But, my friend, that is A, and that's the good news for today."

Truth may be out of fashion. It may be out of favor. It may be out of friends. But it is never out of date; it is timeless in its existence.

b. It Is Total In Its Affect

Truth is not only unending, it is universal. What God says is not only true yesterday, today, and forever; it's true for you, him, and me.

Recently there was a brouhaha over a resolution we passed at the Southern Baptist Convention on Jewish evangelism. We simply recommitted ourselves to praying for the salvation of the Nation of Israel and preaching the gospel and seeking to win the Jewish people. Well, the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith, a Jewish group, called this "An insult to the Jewish people." It is seen today as arrogance to dare proclaim that Jesus is the only way to heaven.

When Jesus said, "You must be born again," He said it to a Jew. It was a Jew, the Apostle Peter, who said, "There is no other name given under heaven whereby we must be saved." It was the greatest Jew of all, who said to his twelve Jewish disciples, "I am the Way, the Truth, and the Life, and no man comes to the Father unless he goes through Me." Truth is total in its affect.

As I stand here preaching to you, I am reminded of something Martin Luther said:

I was born to fight devils and factions. It is my business to remove obstructions, to cut down thorns, to fill up quagmires, and, to open and make straight paths. But if I must have some failing let me rather speak the truth with too great severity than once to act the hypocrite and conceal the truth.

If there no such thing as truth, eternal, universal, absolute, immutable, inerrant truth, I am a liar when I walk to this pulpit, and you are a fool for coming to hear me. The Lord Jesus said there is the real principle of truth.

II. The Revealing Purpose of Truth

Jesus said, "You shall know the truth." That is, not only is there such a thing as absolute truth, but you can absolutely know it. You see, there is a school of thought today that doesn't necessarily deny truth, it just simply says nobody can know truth. Well, what good is truth if you can't know it. Incidentally, the very statement "you cannot know truth" is a truth in itself. So if you cannot know truth, you cannot even know whether that statement is true or not.

The fact is, the God of truth has not only given us the reality of truth, but He has graced us with the ability to know truth. Jesus said in Jn 16:13, "When He, the Spirit of truth has come, He will guide you into all truth."

The Greek word for truth is a compound word made up of a verb and an alpha privative. When a Greek wanted to make a word mean the opposite of what it originally meant, he would prefix the Greek letter, alpha, to the beginning of the word. Now the word for truth is a word that comes from a verb that means "to escape notice, to be unseen, to be concealed." Attached to that is that little alpha privative which negates that meaning. So the word literally means "that which is unconcealed, unhidden, and open to investigation."

Salvation is based on knowing truth. Jesus said in Jn. 17, "This is eternal life that they may know You, the only true God, and Jesus Christ whom you have sent." The assurance of salvation is based on knowing truth. John said, "These things have I written unto you who believe in the name of the Son of God, that you might know that you have eternal life." (I John 5:13)

Now why is all of this so important? Listen carefully. Morality, right and wrong, is based on the reality of truth and the ability to know truth. If something is wrong, it must be because it does not measure up to what is right. But what is right must be based on a standard of truth, or else no one can determine whether or not it is right.

You see, that is why there has been such an effort to remove God and the Bible from society and the school. Because if you take God out, and you take the Bible out, what's right for you may not be right for me, and what's true for you may not be true for me, and we each get to play God in our own lives to determine what's right and what's wrong.

I heard about a man who walked to work every day and he would always stop at a clockmaker's store. He would synchronize his watch with the clock that stood in the window of the clockmaker's shop.

The clockmaker watched this man do this over a period of weeks, and one day struck up a conversation with him, and asked him what kind of work he did. The man reluctantly admitted that he worked as the timekeeper at the nearby factory, and that his mal-functioning watch made it necessary to be constantly readjusted. Since it was his job to ring the closing bell everyday at 4:00 PM, he would synchronize his watch with the clock in the window to guarantee he was right.

When he told the clockmaker this, the clockmaker dropped his head and began to chuckle. He said, "What is so funny?" He said, "I hate to tell you this, but my clock doesn't work very well either, and I've been adjusting it everyday to the bell that I hear every afternoon from the factory at four o'clock!"

That is a perfect picture of the society in which we live. Dear friend, we will never know what time it is, and the clocks of our lives will always be wrong until we set them by God's eternal time piece, which is always accurate to the millisecond, the Word of God.

III. The Redeeming Power of Truth

Truth is not just for the head, truth is for the heart. Jesus said, "You shall know the truth and the truth shall make you free." I was interested to learn that the word "absolute" comes from two Latin words, the word, ab, meaning "from" and, solvere, meaning "to set free." So the word "absolute" literally means "to set free from." That is the purpose of truth to set us free.

It is interesting to see how the Pharisees responded. "They answered Him, ‘We are Abraham's descendants, and have never been in bondage to anyone. How can you say, ‘You will be made free?'" (V. 33) Now think about how ludicrous this statement was. The book of Judges tell us that the Jews had been enslaved by seven different nations.

At one time or another they were in bondage to the Egyptians, the Assyrians, the Babylonians, the Philistines, and the Canaanites. The ten northern tribes had been carried away into captivity by the Assyrians. The two southern tribes had lived seventy years in captivity in Babylon. At that very moment there was a Roman governor in the palace, Roman flags at the seaport, Roman soldiers on the streets, Roman tax collectors in their offices, and a Roman coin with the image of Caesar stamped on it.

There are some of you here this morning in bondage, but you don't want to admit it. There are some of you in bondage to booze and bitterness. There are some of you lash to lust. Some of you are in the jail of jealousy. Some of you are in the prison of pride. There is only one key that will unlock the door of your heart and set you free, and that is the key of truth.

There are four truths that will set you free from any prison. There is the truth about salvation. The truth is you are saved by grace through faith. You can't work for salvation, and you can't earn it; it is a gift. There is the truth about sin. All have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God, and you need to be saved.

There is the truth about self. You no longer have to be controlled by you. The old you can die and be replaced by a new you. "If anyone is in Christ he is a new creation; old things have passed away; behold all things have become new." (II Cor. 5:17)

Then there is the truth about Satan. Satan can no longer have dominion over you. "Greater is He who is in you, than he who is in the world." (I Jn. 4:4)

A poet long ago once wrote this couplet:

Oh that a man may arise in me
That the man I am may cease to be.

There is such a man, and his name is Jesus. He summed it all up when he said, "I am the truth." Atheism denies truth, agnosticism doubts truth, rationalism debates truth, humanism degrades truth, relativism dilutes truth, but Jesus declared, "I am the truth."

If you reject Jesus your whole life will be based on a lie. You will either see the truth in life, or you will be shown the truth in death. The best definition of hell I have ever read is: "Truth seen five seconds too late."

I have discovered that the problem with most people is not in finding the truth, but in facing the truth. One day Michael Angelo saw a block of marble which the owner said had no value. Michael Angelo said, "It is valuable to me. There is an angel imprisoned in that block of marble and I must set it free." Inside of every sinner there is a saint that Jesus Christ wants to set free. When you know Him, who is the truth, the truth will set you free.


1. D. James Kennedy, Character and Destiny, Zondervan, p. 158.

2. Allan Bloom, The Closing of the American Mind (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1987), p. 25.

3. George Barna, The Barta Report: What American's Believe (Ventura, California: Regal Books, 1991) pp. 292-294.

4. Cited by James Kennedy, The Destiny of Man, pp. 281-282.

5. Inspiring Quotations, p. 15.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Sermons, by James Merritt