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This is the second video in the 2025 Renew and Burleigh Church of Christ Lecture Series: Foundations of Christianity. This lecture by Malcolm Lithgow explored the writing and transmission of the Biblical texts and delved into the idea of Biblical genre... The Bible is both diverse and unified: a collection of writings produced over many centuries, across wide geographical regions, in multiple languages, and through a variety of literary genres. Though written by many human authors in real historical contexts, Scripture is understood within the Christian tradition to be inspired by God and unified by a single divine purpose. Its books range from narrative history and poetry to prophecy, wisdom, gospels, letters, and apocalyptic visions, each communicating truth in distinctive ways. The process by which Scripture came into existence involved human authors writing with their own personalities, styles, and historical circumstances, while being guided by the Holy Spirit. This view is often described as verbal plenary inspiration: the belief that all of Scripture, down to the words themselves, is inspired, yet without erasing human authorship. Inspiration applies to the original manuscripts, known as the autographs, which no longer survive but are preserved through extensive manuscript traditions. The Old Testament was transmitted through carefully copied Hebrew manuscripts, forming major textual families such as the Masoretic Text and the Septuagint. Discoveries like the Dead Sea Scrolls demonstrate the remarkable accuracy of this transmission over more than a thousand years. The New Testament, copied widely throughout the early Christian world, survives in an unparalleled number of manuscripts, allowing scholars to reconstruct the original text with very high confidence. Modern Bible translations reflect different philosophies, ranging from word-for-word approaches to meaning-based renderings. Each serves a purpose, and comparing translations can deepen understanding. Reading Scripture well requires attention to genre, historical context, and literary form, as well as prayerful engagement and careful interpretation. The Bible stands as a historically grounded, carefully preserved, and spiritually authoritative text, intended to be read regularly, understood responsibly, and lived out faithfully.