Many of us are open to particular influences in our lives. I know that there are particular Bible teachers that I love to listen to, and it would be hard to say that I am not influenced by them. Sadly, many American adults are persuaded by the new age philosophies or the secular psychology of popular figures in the media—even the philosophies of today’s outspoken atheists.
Yet either extreme—an atheist or someone we deem to be a good Bible teacher—they all have one thing in common as human beings: the ability to mislead and the ability to be misled. We are, after all, human.
There is a great difference with God, however, and it is beautifully displayed in Titus 1:2. God cannot lie. Our hope is secure in a glorious eternity with the Creator because God has promised it, and God cannot lie (John 3:16). It is not even that God won’t lie, or that He does not want to lie, but that He cannot lie. This is the same God who gave us His Word, the Bible. Furthermore, God’s revelation is no lie since God cannot lie.
God’s Word also makes it clear that God is all-powerful (e.g., Jeremiah 32:27), all-knowing (e.g., Psalm 139:2) and ever-present (e.g., Revelation 22:13). We can know there is no power greater than God (Hebrews 6:13), no one more knowledgeable than God, and no one who has been before God or will come after. God cannot err.
Therefore, God cannot mislead or be misled. This is a great comfort of Scripture. This is a great hope of Scripture. We can be sure of scriptural promises and truth, and we can be sure of the hope we have in eternity because of our infallible God and His infallible Word. http://www.answersingenesis.org/articles/2010/07/09/infallibility