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Everyone believes something. But how and why do people believe? What counts as evidence? How much can be assumed or believed by faith alone? When it comes to religious faith, the questions become at once more difficult and more important. Over the centuries, Christians have offered different approaches to explaining or defending the Christian faith, a discipline known as apologetics. But it has not always been clear how different apologetic methods work, or what each approach has to offer.In this comprehensive survey, Brian Morley provides an overview of Christian apologetic approaches and how…mehr
Everyone believes something. But how and why do people believe? What counts as evidence? How much can be assumed or believed by faith alone? When it comes to religious faith, the questions become at once more difficult and more important. Over the centuries, Christians have offered different approaches to explaining or defending the Christian faith, a discipline known as apologetics. But it has not always been clear how different apologetic methods work, or what each approach has to offer.In this comprehensive survey, Brian Morley provides an overview of Christian apologetic approaches and how they differ. He explores the historical and philosophical underpinnings of key figures and major schools of thought, from the presuppositionalism of Cornelius Van Til to the evidentialism of Gary Habermas. Moving beyond theory, Morley also covers apologetic application, demonstrating how each view works out in practical terms. This guide covers the complexities of apologetics in a way that is accessible to the nonspecialist. Even-handed and respectful of each apologist and their contribution, this book provides the reader with a formidable array of defenses for the faith.
Brian K. Morley (PhD, Claremont University) is professor of philosophy and apologetics at the Master's College in Santa Clarita, California. He is the author of God in the Shadows: Evil in God's World and has been a member of the Evangelical Theological Society, the Evangelical Philosophical Society and the Society of Christian Philosophers. Morley and his wife Donna are founders of Faith and Reason Forum, a ministry to those who want an intelligent faith—to think more deeply about God and grow deeper in their Christian faith.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction Chart Part I: Foundational Issues 1. Apologetics in the Bible 2. Apologetics in History: A Survey Part II: Apologetic Methodologies Presuppositionalism 3. Cornelius Van Til: Christianity Is an Intellectual Commitment We Cannot Do Without 4. John Frame: We See Ultimate Truth from More Than One Perspective Reformed Epistemology 5. Alvin Plantinga: Belief in God Is an Immediate Awareness, and Belief in Christianity Is a Gift of God Combinationalism 6. E. J. Carnell, Gordon Lewis and Francis Schaeffer: Christianity Is Logical, Factual and Viable Classical Apologetics 7. Introduction to Classical Apologetics 8. Richard Swinburne: Theism and Christianity Are Highly Probable 9. William Lane Craig: God Is Proved by Theistic Arguments, and Christianity by Evidences 10. Norman Geisler: Theism Is Proved by What Is Undeniable, and Christianity Is Known from Evidences Evidentialism 11. John Warwick Montgomery 12. Gary Habermas Conclusion Author Index Subject Index Scripture Index
Introduction Chart Part I: Foundational Issues 1. Apologetics in the Bible 2. Apologetics in History: A Survey Part II: Apologetic Methodologies Presuppositionalism 3. Cornelius Van Til: Christianity Is an Intellectual Commitment We Cannot Do Without 4. John Frame: We See Ultimate Truth from More Than One Perspective Reformed Epistemology 5. Alvin Plantinga: Belief in God Is an Immediate Awareness, and Belief in Christianity Is a Gift of God Combinationalism 6. E. J. Carnell, Gordon Lewis and Francis Schaeffer: Christianity Is Logical, Factual and Viable Classical Apologetics 7. Introduction to Classical Apologetics 8. Richard Swinburne: Theism and Christianity Are Highly Probable 9. William Lane Craig: God Is Proved by Theistic Arguments, and Christianity by Evidences 10. Norman Geisler: Theism Is Proved by What Is Undeniable, and Christianity Is Known from Evidences Evidentialism 11. John Warwick Montgomery 12. Gary Habermas Conclusion Author Index Subject Index Scripture Index
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