How to Approach Difficult and Offensive Passages in Scripture with Faithfulness and Trust

A dark charcoal background with a soft light beam in the top corner. Centered serif text reads “Hard Bible Passages” with the bottom line “Trust His Word” in muted gold, emphasizing clarity, biblical authority, and trust in Scripture.

⏱️ Estimated Reading Time: 3 min read

How Should Christians Approach Hard Bible Passages with Faithfulness and Trust?

What should Christians do with difficult or offensive passages in Scripture?

In this episode of Contending for the Word Q&A, Dave Jenkins addresses a question many believers wrestle with, often quietly and sometimes uncomfortably: how should Christians approach difficult or offensive passages in the Word of God while remaining faithful to Scripture and confident in the character of God?

Some passages confuse us. Others challenge our assumptions. Still others confront modern sensibilities and deeply held cultural beliefs. But hard passages are not defects in Scripture. They are often doorways to deeper trust, greater humility, and more careful study of God’s Word.

Rather than avoiding difficult texts, Christians are called to wrestle with them faithfully, reading them in context, interpreting them with the rest of Scripture, and submitting to the wisdom of God rather than the pressure of the age.

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Key Scriptures

  • Isaiah 55:8–9
  • Romans 9:14–18
  • 2 Timothy 3:16–17

What This Episode Addresses

  • Why difficult passages should be acknowledged honestly
  • How context helps clarify hard texts
  • Why Scripture must interpret Scripture
  • How cultural pressure can distort our reading of the Bible
  • Why Christians can trust God’s Word even when understanding feels incomplete

Main Points

1. Acknowledge the Difficulty Honestly

Faithful Christians do not need to pretend that difficult passages are easy. Scripture itself acknowledges tension, mystery, and struggle. Admitting that a passage is hard does not mean doubting God. It means approaching His Word with humility rather than defensiveness.

2. Read Difficult Passages in Context

Many texts feel offensive because they are read in isolation. Historical context, covenant context, and literary genre all matter. Laws given to Israel, prophetic judgments, and narrative descriptions of violence must be read within the broader story of redemption.

3. Let Scripture Interpret Scripture

The Bible is its own best interpreter. Clear passages help illuminate harder ones. God’s revealed character—His holiness, justice, mercy, and faithfulness—must guide how we read passages that challenge us.

4. Submit to God’s Wisdom Rather Than Cultural Pressure

Some passages offend us not because they are unclear, but because they confront our assumptions. Modern culture often demands that God conform to contemporary values, but Scripture calls us to be transformed by God’s truth even when it challenges us.

Key Takeaway

Hard passages do not undermine Scripture’s authority. They invite deeper trust in God’s wisdom, character, and purposes.

Conclusion

God has not given His people a sanitized Bible. He has given us a truthful one. Difficult passages remind us that God is God and we are not. They call us to trust His wisdom, submit to His authority, and rest in His goodness revealed fully in Jesus Christ.

For more from Contending for the Word Q&A, please visit our page at Servants of Grace or our YouTube playlist.

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