I don't think applying the attributes of God to something He creates as being inappropriate.
Again, given that it came from God we can and should believe Scripture to be inerrant.
Well, God created me, didn't He? So am I perfect and infallible?
This is not just a frivolous question. The extent to which God can "communicate" His attributes to me is only so much as the extent to which I can become a revelation of Him. The Bible is a sufficient but not exhaustive revelation of God, it never claims to be identified with God. Jesus says of Himself that "Whoever has seen Me has seen the Father", does the Bible say that of itself? Instead it points to Jesus through the Old and New Testaments and says that whoever has seen that Man has seen God Himself. It makes little claim about itself along the way, except ...
2 Timothy 3:16-17 states:
All Scripture is breathed out by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness, that the man of Godmay be competent, equipped for every good work.
In other words if God said it, it is without fault, it is 100% accurate and trustworthy. If part of it were in error it certainly wouldn't be good for teaching, reproof, correction or training in righteousness.
Funny that you should read something foreign into the text. Was Paul talking about the perfection of the Bible, or was he talking of its
utility? The Bible can certainly be useful even if it was merely confined to the science of its era and unable to express things in terms of the science of today. Genesis 1 is certainly profitable for teaching, reproof, correction, and training in righteousness, even if we do not believe that it is a factual description (of a real event, mind you) or that it is meant to form any historical framework for any sort of scientific investigation (as AiG's statement of faith claims).
2 Timothy 2:15 states:
Do your best to present yourself to God as one approved, a worker who has no need to be ashamed, rightly handling the word of truth.
How can one rightly handle the word of truth when not all of it is true?
But it
is true, just not all in a literal or scientific sense.
anyhow, i am still confused. i don't see the claim in Scripture that it shares the perfections of God, nor do i see that the perfections are what makes it authoritative. but i do see the logic that if you base the authority of Scripture on it being perfection itself that any challenge to that attribute would bring the authority down as well as demonstrate that it is not perfect. Which appears to me to make the argument very brittle and unyielding to the problems of sin effecting not just the transmission but the translation and interpretation of Scripture. You are not handling the perfect Scripture when you pick up an English Bible so however can it be perfect and authoritative?
this appears to be more like the Islamic defense of the Quran as a heavenly eternal book in Arabic just brought to earth by Mohammed rather than the traditional doctrine of inspiration.
Indeed, this is what the whole issue always looks like to me too. It looks like the YEC "Biblical inerrantists" see the Bible as a monolithic, uncreated entity coequal with God in terms of perfection, handed down to Moses (or whoever) on a golden platter, don't ask anything more. It's a comfortable view. A book will not argue with you, or paint grey areas, or force you to think outside the culture it represented, or tell you that you are wrong about anything it doesn't say. So it is easy to know God when God is essentially contained in a book.
For "communicating" God's incommunicable attribute of perfection to a collection of text is just that: saying that God is essentially contained to the text. It essentially descends to claiming of the Bible as Jesus claimed for Himself "Whoever has read this has known the Father." It is far harder to grapple with the idea that the Bible may instead be essentially a human response to a divine God, and that God's ultimate revelation is a Person and not a book. It humbles us and leaves us the responsibility of charting our (God-guided) way through new moral grounds, of having to find a genuinely Christ-like response to the new issues of things like abortion and the ethics of human embryos, instead of blindly quoting a verse from the Bible and resting in the assurance that "whenever I quote the Bible I quote God."
It feels more like this than like a Christian understanding of the Bible:
In a rare instance of classic kalâm reasoning, Imam Malik gave the most succint statement of this doctrine:
"The Qur'an is the Speech of Allah, the Speech of Allah comes from Him, and nothing created comes from Allah Most High." Narrated by al-Dhahabi in Siyar A`lam al-Nubala' (Dar al-Fikr ed. 7:416).
http://www.abc.se/~m9783/uncrq_e.html