Before I get to the GQ article, I also wanted to share that while I was watching “Fox and Friends” this morning, there was a segment where Dr. Oz was interviewed because of his heroic effort when he stopped to help after seeing a bus on fire on the side of the road. It wasn’t the first time he had done this. In the past, he also stopped upon seeing other accidents that had happened; in an effort to help anyone who may have needed to be rescued. His decision to help (while many cars just drove past the burning bus) is quite admirable.
However, during the Fox and Friends interview, he said something that I thought was very odd. While discussing the concept of evil, he said, “Evil is not when bad people do bad things. That is going to happen. Evil is when good people watch bad people do bad things.”
What??? Isn’t evil both of those things? Dr. Oz only focused on just one concept (his own belief, apparently) of evil and that sounded very odd to me.
Dictionary.com attempts to explain the term “evil,” but noticeably avoids any reference to the Bible’s definitions/explanations about the term and the source of it.
The Blue Letter Bible search of the term “evil” shows that “evil”
occurs 485 times in 457 verses in the NKJV.
Page 1 / 10 exact matches
(Gen 2:9–Jdg 9:57)
So, why would Dictionary.com not include at least some reference to the Bible regarding that term? Maybe even one like this verse:
Jhn 3:19 – “And this is the condemnation, that the light has come into the world, and men loved darkness rather than light, because their deeds were evil.
Perhaps Todd Starnes latest article, The Bible gets a bad review from GQ Magazine — Although it’s the bestselling book in history helps explain not only why an online dictionary editor might make the choice to eliminate any reference of the term “evil” being discussed and defined by the Bible, but also why a magazine like “GQ” would choose to give a bad review about the best selling book in history!
Excerpt from the GQ article:
“The Holy Bible is rated very highly by all the people who supposedly live by it but who in actuality have not read it. Those who have read it know there are some good parts, but overall it is certainly not the finest thing that man has ever produced. It is repetitive, self-contradictory, sententious, foolish, and even at times ill-intentioned.”
Starne’s reply is quite humorous and shares the GQ editor’s foolishness as well:
As a longtime Southern Baptist, I’ve grown accustomed to such foolish declarations from the “enlightened” crowd. I suspect the highbrow editors at GQ Magazine would not know the difference between John the Baptist and Balaam’s Ass.

There are many Bible passages and verses that I could cite here. One of the best is John Chapter 8. Many people know one or two familiar verses from that chapter:
John 8:31
Then Jesus said to those Jews who believed Him, “If you abide in My word, you are My disciples indeed.
John 8:32
“And you shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.”

But I suggest reading the entire chapter because it is one of many segments in the Bible that shares the Gospel of Truth; and yet, the ending verse of the chapter shows how easily unrepentant men will reject Jesus and the truth that He shares.
Todd Starnes writes:
The truth is the Bible documents the greatest story ever told – a story about agape love and sacrifice and redemption – everlasting life.
And it’s also the best-selling book of all time – more than 5 billion copies sold, according to Guinness World Records, which also reports that the whole Bible has been translated into 349 languages and says at least one book of the Bible has been translated into 2,123 languages. Statistics Brain estimates even more Bibles have been printed – just over 6 billion.
“The Holy Bible is God-breathed, it is living and active, and it is sharper than a double-edged sword,” the Rev. Franklin Graham wrote on Facebook. “There is nothing more powerful, and there’s nothing more needed by mankind than the Word of God.”

Graham, the president of the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association, explained that the subject of the Bible from Genesis to Revelation is Jesus Christ.
“And one day soon, every knee will bow and every tongue confess that He is Lord,” he declared.
Now far be it from me to tell the pompous, erudite, literary crowd at GQ Magazine what books they should and should not read, but they might want to glance at John 3:16 before they kick the bucket. It states “For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life.”

Hat tip: Todd Starnes article at Fox News.
GQ says the Bible is one of the most overrated books
April 24, 2018Before I get to the GQ article, I also wanted to share that while I was watching “Fox and Friends” this morning, there was a segment where Dr. Oz was interviewed because of his heroic effort when he stopped to help after seeing a bus on fire on the side of the road. It wasn’t the first time he had done this. In the past, he also stopped upon seeing other accidents that had happened; in an effort to help anyone who may have needed to be rescued. His decision to help (while many cars just drove past the burning bus) is quite admirable.
What??? Isn’t evil both of those things? Dr. Oz only focused on just one concept (his own belief, apparently) of evil and that sounded very odd to me.
Dictionary.com attempts to explain the term “evil,” but noticeably avoids any reference to the Bible’s definitions/explanations about the term and the source of it.
The Blue Letter Bible search of the term “evil” shows that “evil”
occurs 485 times in 457 verses in the NKJV.
Page 1 / 10 exact matches
(Gen 2:9–Jdg 9:57)
So, why would Dictionary.com not include at least some reference to the Bible regarding that term? Maybe even one like this verse:
Perhaps Todd Starnes latest article, The Bible gets a bad review from GQ Magazine — Although it’s the bestselling book in history helps explain not only why an online dictionary editor might make the choice to eliminate any reference of the term “evil” being discussed and defined by the Bible, but also why a magazine like “GQ” would choose to give a bad review about the best selling book in history!
Excerpt from the GQ article:
Starne’s reply is quite humorous and shares the GQ editor’s foolishness as well:
There are many Bible passages and verses that I could cite here. One of the best is John Chapter 8. Many people know one or two familiar verses from that chapter:
But I suggest reading the entire chapter because it is one of many segments in the Bible that shares the Gospel of Truth; and yet, the ending verse of the chapter shows how easily unrepentant men will reject Jesus and the truth that He shares.
Todd Starnes writes:
Tags:Dr. Oz comment, evil, GQ article, Jesus Christ, The Bible, truth, where to find truth
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